The Future Remembered: An Essay in Biopolitics |
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Page 18
... shared a common oneness with each other . Human beings , for example , might vary from each other in innumerable ways ( " accidentally " ) but shared a fundamental form of exis- tence ( " substance " ) which distinguished them from all ...
... shared a common oneness with each other . Human beings , for example , might vary from each other in innumerable ways ( " accidentally " ) but shared a fundamental form of exis- tence ( " substance " ) which distinguished them from all ...
Page 66
... shared by all of the species who wept and exulted , who conceived and nurtured offspring , who shared and connived , lived and died as humans to- gether . Regardless of the form of the polis , its substance remained the same . And ...
... shared by all of the species who wept and exulted , who conceived and nurtured offspring , who shared and connived , lived and died as humans to- gether . Regardless of the form of the polis , its substance remained the same . And ...
Page 92
... shared , a knowledge to be learned , and values to be passed on . They are , in fact , our cultural survival ... sharing and mutual aid are not just " nice things to do , " but are the basic necessities of survival , for the individual ...
... shared , a knowledge to be learned , and values to be passed on . They are , in fact , our cultural survival ... sharing and mutual aid are not just " nice things to do , " but are the basic necessities of survival , for the individual ...
Contents
The Query and the Quest | 5 |
The Philosophers Stone | 15 |
In Search of the Beast | 31 |
Copyright | |
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ability absolute accepted aggression Alexander Pope ambivert ancestors animal Aristotle big brain biological Biopolitics bipedal bonding century characteristics competition complex conclusion conspecifics contemporary creature cultural Darwin describe E. O. Wilson empirical environment epistemology evolution evolutionary existence fact female fossil G. W. F. Hegel genes genetic Hence Homo sapiens human behavior human group human nature human nature theory human normative human sexuality human societies human value systems Hume Hume's individual innate instinct institutions intraspecific justice knowledge Konrad Lorenz living Locke logical Lorenz male Marx Marxism matter means modern moral relativism moral relativity neo-cortex notion nurturing observation obvious offspring organic origin ourselves paleoanthropology perceived person perspective philosophy Plato polis political Pope An Essay possess preference primitive principles public morality question reason relationship remains reproductive result sciences sense sexual simply social sociobiology species survival tion tradition truth unique University Press verifiable view of human York