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Understanding origins

an introduction

Jean-Pierre DupuyFrancisco Varela

pp. 1-25

Résumé

We wish to start with the following observation: the humanities and the "hard" sciences (here meaning especially biology and a good part of the cognitive sciences) differ considerably in their ambitions concerning the "big questions' . The hard sciences are more daring than ever in proposing how the cosmos formed and life originated, how species evolved and the destiny of it all. In contrast, for the humanities it has been a time of dispersion, of fragmentation, of a dissemination which resists any attempt at integration on a grand scale. The time of the "big theories' seems to have been left far behind.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Varela Francisco, Dupuy Jean-Pierre (1992) Understanding origins: contemporary views on the origin of life, mind and society. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 1-25

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-8054-0_1

Citation complète:

Dupuy Jean-Pierre, Varela Francisco, 1992, Understanding origins: an introduction. In F. Varela & J.-P. Dupuy (eds.) Understanding origins (1-25). Dordrecht, Springer.