Abstract
Philosopher John Searle talks about what he considers to be the three primary contributions of Charles Darwin. At the time Darwin lived, Professor Searle explains, his most influential idea was that natural selection, rather than intelligent design, could be seen as the force behind the construction of nature. But Professor Searle finds two other Darwinian ideas equally as important: the notion that human beings are continuous with the rest of nature, and the substitution of two levels of explanation--causal as well as functional--for the former model of explanation, which utilized just a single level.
Collection
Subject
Series
Introduction to Philosophy, The Examined Life
Duration
00:05:05 (HH:MM:SS)
Language:
English
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