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Name: Chance and Necessity

Full title: Chance and Necessity: An Essay on the Natural Philosophy of Modern Biology
Author: Jacques Monod
Year: 1970
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Popularity: 1.5
Genres/categories: Science, Philosophy, Non Fiction

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Winner of the National Book Award for Translation in 1972.

This radical book by Nobel laureate Monod is an important intellectual event. Chance and Necessity is a philosophical statement whose intention is to sweep away as both false and dangerous the animist conception of man that has dominated virtually all Western worldviews from primitive cultures to those of dialectical materialists. He bases his argument on the evidence of modern biology, which indisputably shows, that man is the product of chance genetic mutation. With the unrelenting logic of the scientist, he draws upon what we now know (and can theorize) of genetic structure to suggest an new way of looking at ourselves. He argues that objective scientific knowledge, the only reliable knowledge, denies the concepts of destiny or evolutionary purpose that underlie traditional philosophies. He contends that the persistence of those concepts is responsible for the intensifying schizophrenia of a world that accepts, and lives by, the fruits of science while refusing to face its moral implications. Dismissing as "animist" not only Plato, Hegel, Bergson and Teilhard de Chardin but Spencer and Marx as well, he calls for a new ethic that will recognize the distinction between objective knowledge and the realm of values--an ethic of knowledge that can, perhaps, save us from our deepening spiritual malaise, from the new age of darkness he sees coming.
Preface
Of strange objects
Vitalisms and animisms
Maxwell's demons
Microscopic cybernetics
Molecular ontogenesis
Invariance and perturbations
Evolution
The frontiers
The kingdom and the darkness
Appendixes
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