

Darwin and philosophy
pp. 370-381
in: Alfred Tauber (ed), Science and the quest for reality, Berlin, Springer, 1997Abstract
An essay on the philosophy of evolution in the century since the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species can be written in two sentences. By the end of the first fifty years, everybody in the educated world took evolution for granted, but the idea was still intellectually exciting and its philosophical exploitation was entering upon its period of full maturity. By the end of the next fifty years, evolution belongs to ‘common sense’ almost as thoroughly as the Copernican hypothesis and other early landmarks of the scientific revolution; but the idea is no longer exciting, and evolutionary philosophy is out of fashion.2