Our
look at the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos brings us now to philosopher of science John Dupré, whose
review of the book appeared in Notre
Dame Philosophical Reviews. The review
is pretty harsh. At his kindest Dupré
says he found the book “frustrating and unconvincing.” Less kind is the remark that “as far as an
attack that might concern evolutionists, they will feel, to borrow the fine
phrase of former British minister, Dennis Healey, as if they had been savaged
by a sheep.”
The remark is not only unkind but unjust. At the beginning of his review, Dupré gives the impression that Nagel is attacking neo-Darwinian evolutionary biology per se. Dupré writes:
Darwinism, neo- or otherwise, is an account of the relations between living things past and present and of their ultimate origins, full of fascinating problems in detail, but beyond any serious doubt in general outline. This lack of doubt derives not, as Nagel sometimes insinuates, from a prior commitment to a metaphysical view -- there are theistic Darwinists as well as atheistic, naturalists and supernaturalists -- but from overwhelming evidence from a variety of sources: biogeography, the fossil record, comparative physiology and genomics, and so on. Nagel offers no arguments against any of this, and indeed states explicitly that he is not competent to do so. His complaint is that there are some explanatory tasks that he thinks evolution should perform that he thinks it can't.
The remark is not only unkind but unjust. At the beginning of his review, Dupré gives the impression that Nagel is attacking neo-Darwinian evolutionary biology per se. Dupré writes:
Darwinism, neo- or otherwise, is an account of the relations between living things past and present and of their ultimate origins, full of fascinating problems in detail, but beyond any serious doubt in general outline. This lack of doubt derives not, as Nagel sometimes insinuates, from a prior commitment to a metaphysical view -- there are theistic Darwinists as well as atheistic, naturalists and supernaturalists -- but from overwhelming evidence from a variety of sources: biogeography, the fossil record, comparative physiology and genomics, and so on. Nagel offers no arguments against any of this, and indeed states explicitly that he is not competent to do so. His complaint is that there are some explanatory tasks that he thinks evolution should perform that he thinks it can't.










