Re: Darwin, Human Nature, & a Short Text
- From: "J.H.Boersema" <joshb@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 10 Apr 2009 13:36:36 -0400 (EDT)
On 2009-03-05, \"the desert fox" <brandon.hendrickson@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I'm teaching a philosophy class at a high school, and have started a
multi-stage debate over human nature. The class has divided itself
into two groups ("nature" vs. "nurture", of course!), and is aping the
arguments made in historical texts to help advance their own theses.
Today we did John Locke's "blank slate" theory. For our next text,
I'd like to provide them with a biologically- (hopefully
evolutionary-) based text from the 18th to mid 20th century.
(Following that is going to be an "anti-human nature" anthropology
work, followed by Stephen Pinker.)
I was thinking of doing some early eugenicists (of the non-Hitlerian
perspective), but thought that Darwin might be even better. But I
still haven't gotten around to reading "Origin" and "Descent", and so
am not aware where I might find a short (hopefully easy-to-read; Locke
was tough for the kids) excerpt.
Does anyone happen to know of one?
- brandon
Maybe you'd like my work:
http://www.jhwh.be/~joshb/technical_darwinism.html
Not only is it short and scientific, it is cutting edge as well !
Relatively easy too. Do science, make history at the same time
(because this stuff still hasn't broken through, still waiting in
the wings.)
regards, good luck.
.
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