Reply to Holland... The Meaning of Life and Darwinism

Environmental Values 20 (3):299 - 308 (2011)
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Abstract

While finding no fault with Darwinism as a scientific theory, this paper argues that there are serious problems for the scientistic construal of Darwinism that interprets the universe as nothing but a purely random and contingent flow of events. Life in a godless impersonal universe is beset by contingency, alienation, despair, failure and fragility. Notwithstanding Alan Holland's claim that we can evade these problems though self-affirmation, I argue that human beings can achieve meaningful lives only by acknowledging our dependency and accepting the authority of values we did not create

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John Cottingham
University of Reading

Citations of this work

Human Nature and the Transcendent.John Cottingham - 2012 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 70:233-254.
Is Naturalism Bleak? A Reply to Holland and Cottingham.Ian James Kidd - 2013 - Environmental Values 22 (6):689-702.
What Do We Do about Bleakness?Alan Holland - 2011 - Environmental Values 20 (3):315 - 321.
Editorial: To Act or Not to Act?Katie Mcshane - 2011 - Environmental Values 20 (3):297 - 298.

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References found in this work

On the Meaning of Life.John Cottingham - 2002 - New York: Routledge.
Integrity and Fragmentation.John Cottingham - 2009 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 27 (1):2-14.
Darwin and the Meaning in Life.Alan Holland - 2009 - Environmental Values 18 (4):503 - 518.
The good life and the radical contingency of the ethical.John Cottingham - 2008 - In Daniel Callcut (ed.), Reading Bernard Williams. New York: Routledge. pp. 25--43.

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