Livre | Chapitre
Naturalism, humanism, and the theory of action
pp. 235-249
Résumé
Since antiquity, two formulations of the basic nature of man have coexisted in most major cultures. One is the conception of man as one fact of nature—in no fundamental way outstanding among the myriad varied facts of the natural world. This conception, in recent times articulated within the framework of the historical account of big-bang cosmology and archaeological anthropology, has the theoretical underpinning of thermodynamics and Darwinian-Mendelian biology. Currently, its limits are being stretched by the attempts of some sociobiologists to reformulate hitherto sacrosanct notions about man.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Royce Joseph R., Mos Leendert (1981) Humanistic psychology: concepts and criticisms. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 235-249
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4684-1071-6_10
Citation complète:
Jung Richard, 1981, Naturalism, humanism, and the theory of action. In J. R. Royce & L. Mos (eds.) Humanistic psychology (235-249). Dordrecht, Springer.