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Adaptedness and Existence in British Natural Theology Adaptedness and Existence in British Natural Theology
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The Conditions for Existence Meet Natural Theology The Conditions for Existence Meet Natural Theology
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Geology and the Explanation of Life’s History Geology and the Explanation of Life’s History
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Darwin, Extinction, and Evolution Darwin, Extinction, and Evolution
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Darwin and the Conditions for Existence Darwin and the Conditions for Existence
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Wallace and the Conditions for Existence Wallace and the Conditions for Existence
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Darwin, Wallace, and Inheritance Darwin, Wallace, and Inheritance
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Evolutionary Controversies before the Synthesis Evolutionary Controversies before the Synthesis
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6 Darwin, Natural Theology, and the Principle of Natural Selection
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Published:October 2009
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Abstract
This chapter discusses Cuvier's influence in Britain, in particular the way in which his views were perceived in the intellectual environment that provided the intellectual background to Darwin's theorizing. It first examines the implicit assumption underlying the use of the concept of “adaptedness” in natural theology, and then examines the role played by the principle of conditions for existence in Darwin's theory. The chapter also argues that by separating the concept of adaptedness from its empirical base in existence, and then basing his evolutionary theory on this disembodied adaptedness, Darwin introduced a teleological determinism. This teleology is expressed in two related conceptions: (1) that evolution is a process going from a less-adapted to a better-adapted state and (2) that natural selection is a deterministic force, or agent, which directs the evolutionary process toward this better-adapted state.
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