No Hiding Place: Essays on the new nature and poetry

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Author: John Barnie

ISBN-10: 0708313426

ISBN-13: 9780708313428

Category: American & Canadian Literature

During the past fifty years the Neo-Darwinian synthesis of evolutionary theory with genetics has provided us with a powerful new model of what nature is. The model has much to say about human behaviour too, largely as a result of revolutionary developments in palaeoanthropology and the new discipline of sociobiology.\ The consequences for philosophy, religion and the humanities generally are profound, yet for most part those educated outside the sciences have remained aloof from the...

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During the past fifty years the Neo-Darwinian synthesis of evolutionary theory with genetics has provided us with a powerful new model of what nature is. The model has much to say about human behaviour too, largely as a result of revolutionary developments in palaeoanthropology and the new discipline of sociobiology. The consequences for philosophy, religion and the humanities generally are profound, yet for most part those educated outside the sciences have remained aloof from the philosophical and ethical implications of Neo-Darwinism; or, recognizing the challenge to beliefs we would rather not reconsider, the response has been hostile. This gap between the biological sciences, where some of the most exciting thinking about nature and human behaviour are taking place, and the humanities and the arts, where such thinking ought to be seized on imaginatively and integrated into our lives, is one of the more important aspects of what might be called the split personality of Western culture. These essays represent attempts by someone trained in the humanities to understand the new nature and the intellectual restructuring which it insists that we make. Essays on nature are interspersed with others on poets, including R. S. Thomas, A. R. Ammons and Harry Martinson, who in various ways and to varying degrees have responded in this century to the pressures of the new thinking about nature on our lives.

AcknowledgementsIntroduction11What do we mean by nature?92Limits to imagination153Against the warehouse keepers314Fatalists of the new kind435The candle in the window556The age of the arthropods677Poetry and the new nature868A look at Gaia939King of the blues, poor man of American poetry10610Realpolitik and Utopia12311At the zoo13212A walk along Corsons Inlet14013A personal history of reading147Afterthought155