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Anthropology
and Dialectical Naturalism
A
Philosophical Manifesto
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by
Brian Morris
Is the world
just a cultural construct where people create their own realities? In
this illuminating and wide-ranging philosophical treatise, Brian Morris
critiques broad swathes of recent theory as he seeks to reclaim anthropology
as a historical social science. He achieves this by grounding it within
a metaphysic of “dialectical naturalism” or “evolutionary realism”—a
tradition long ignored by academic philosophy.
After reviewing the anthropological background of this worldview—the
Greeks and the Enlightenment—Morris explores two essential themes. First,
he critically assesses the main forms of dialectical naturalism, including
Darwin’s evolutionary theory, Marx’s historical materialism, and the
hylorealism of the philosopher-scientist Mario Bunge. Second, he offers
a strong plea to retain the dual heritage of anthropology as a historical
science that combines both humanism and naturalism. A powerful philosophical
manifesto, the book cogently upholds dialectical naturalism as the most
grounding philosophy for anthropology and the social sciences.
Black
Rose Books (University of Chicago Press) (Sept., 2020) 200 pages
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https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/A/bo50461537.html
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