Luck, or Cunning, as the Main Means of Organic Modification
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About This Book
The author argues that heredity functions like a form of unconscious memory and that purposive, mindful processes significantly shape organic change, challenging the view that natural selection alone accounts for evolution. Through critical readings of contemporary thinkers and examinations of plant and animal behavior, he critiques Darwin, Spencer, and others, disputes the purely accidental origin of variations, and presses for the reintroduction of design or agency into developmental explanations. The book mixes polemic, philosophical analysis, and empirical observation to reconsider heredity, adaptation, and the explanatory limits of selection.
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