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The unity of knowledge across the sciences and humanities. Bestseller by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author,one of our greatest living scientists.
As elegant in its prose as it is rich inits ideas...a book of immense importance.
More Reviews and RecommendationsEdward O. Wilson was born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1929. He received his B.S. and M.S. in biology from the University of Alabama and, in 1955, his Ph.D. in biology from Harvard, where he has since taught, and where he has received both of its college-wide teaching awards. He is currently Research Professor and Honorary Curator in Entomology of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. He is the author of two Pulitzer Prize-winning books, OOn Human Nature (1978) and The Ants(1990, with Bert Hölldobler), as well as the recipient of many fellowships, honors, and awards, including the 1977 National Medal of Science, the Crafoord Prize from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1990), the International Prize for Biology from Japan (1993), and, for his conservation efforts, the Gold Medal of the Worldwide Fund for Nature (1990) and the Audubon Medal of the National Audubon Society (1995). He is on the Board of Directors of The Nature Conservancy, Conservation International, and the American Museum of Natural History, and gives many lectures throughout the world. He lives in Lexington, Massachusetts with his wife, Irene.
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06/20/2009: The idea of the unity of knowledge is very old and Wilson adds little to its content, but he updates the nuances of the subject with great skill, clarity and learning, bringing it from the basement of philosophy and science into the vocabulary of the 21st century. A provocative, engaging and intellectually sweeping feat of philosophical synthesis and popular science writing.
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08/27/2008: Wilson`s Consilience is imaginative, bold and provocative. In fact, it is rare that thinkers these days dare to venture beyond the narow confines of their fields and attempt an uber-theory. Wilson should be congratulated for his guts and for his intellectual audacity. The work necessary for the true consilience he seeks is still a ways off, and may end up proving contrary to Wilson`s biological determinism. Nonetheless, the complexity aspects of large scale biology (ecology, population dynamics, etc.) for which Wilson is best known, do seem to offer a cogent model for understanding a wide range of human activities.
"A dazzling journey across the sciences and humanities in search of deep laws to unite them." --The Wall Street Journal
One of our greatest living scientists--and the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes for On Human Nature and The Ants--gives us a work of visionary importance that may be the crowning achievement of his career. In Consilience (a word that originally meant "jumping together"), Edward O. Wilson renews the Enlightenment's search for a unified theory of knowledge in disciplines that range from physics to biology, the social sciences and the humanities.
Using the natural sciences as his model, Wilson forges dramatic links between fields. He explores the chemistry of the mind and the genetic bases of culture. He postulates the biological principles underlying works of art from cave-drawings to Lolita. Presenting the latest findings in prose of wonderful clarity and oratorical eloquence, and synthesizing it into a dazzling whole, Consilience is science in the path-clearing traditions of Newton, Einstein, and Richard Feynman.
As elegant in its prose as it is rich inits ideas...a book of immense importance.
Historically, all of the sciences were once united under the rubric of "natural science." Over time, they became fragmented and specialized. Nevertheless, Wilson argues that there is a genetic and neurological basis for knowledge and that all subjects of human inquiry can be reunited under the umbrella of "consilience."
With steadfast optimism and enlightened erudition, Harvard naturalist and evolutionist Wilson (In Search of Nature) argues that scientific inquiry is progressing toward a comprehensive view of this universe in light of the essential unity of all reality. He envisions a future synthesis of the special sciences and humanities that will support a pervasive materialistic worldview. Reminiscent of Auguste Comte, Condorcet, and Francis Bacon, Wilson gives priority to physical laws and objective evidence over all those concepts and beliefs that question the power of science to unravel the unity of nature. In particular, linking genes and cultures, he claims that even mental activity (including creativity) will be understood and appreciated in terms of the evolved epigenetic rules, anatomy, and physiology of the human brain. Other topics treated include consciousness, complexity, reductionism, and the deep origins of human nature. As a bold blueprint for ongoing human inquiry, this provocative book is recommended for large academic and public science collections.-- H. James Birx, Canisius Coll., Buffalo, NY
Edward O. Wilson, twice winner of the Pulitzer Prize and pioneer of sociobiology and biodiversity, argues for the fundamental unity of all knowledge and the need to search for consilience<-->the proof that everything in our world is organized in terms of a small number of fundamental natural laws that comprise the principles underlying every branch of learning.
Wilson's book sweeps across vast areas of learning in lucid, unpretentious, often eloquent prose....In Consilience, he distills and integrates his ideas to argue that a unity of knowledge is possible -- and that it is sorely needed for more than purely intellectual reasons.
The eminent sociobiologist envisions a grand reconciliation of science and the humanities.
A dazzling journey across the sciences and humanities in search of deep laws to unite them.
As elegant in its prose as it is rich inits ideas...a book of immense importance.
A tour de force from a scholar for whom such tours are par for the course. Wilson, who sowed the seeds of sociobiology decades ago, expands his agenda to the whole of human learning and behavior. All, in both the realms of art and science, can be reduced to a common set of unifying principles, or consilience. All can be subsumed under the basic laws of physics and their offspring in chemistry and biology. For instance, the reductionist new genetics and molecular biology have revolutionized our understanding of biology in terms of evolution, human development, and the brain as the vehicle of human behavior. Further, Wilson restates his notion of the co-evolution of genes and culture, but it is here that his argument is weakest, based on the premise that we are genetically programmed toward certain archetypal forms and themes which he finds in primitive and ancient art but which are dubiously applicable in the modern world. Wilsons arguments on achieving consilience in the h umanities will no doubt rile many of the faithful in these fields. For example, he rails against economists for their arid mathematical models that pay no heed to the irrational ways humans behave and he pretty well damns anyone who espouses cultural relativism; and he has very little good to say about philosophers in general. On the other hand, he writes knowledgeably about mind, making it clear that emotion is inextricably tied to reason, and his distinction between religion and ethics is well argued. In the end, Wilson invites scholars to explore the gaps in knowledge, as well as move toward synthesis: We are drowning in information, he says, while starving for wisdom. :He also pulls out all the stops onthe future of the biosphere, noting the potential for changing our genet ic make- up. No doubt many scholars will accuse Wilson of simplistic arguments, errors, and distortions. But how many have the guts to venture beyond the boundaries of their specialty to make a case for unity? For that reason alone, Wilsons proposal merits the attention and debate of the broad community of scholars.
Loading...Comments from the Seller: Well-worn copy. front cover bent. slightly water damaged. underlining in text. Book is ACCEPTABLE with noted wear to cover and pages. Binding intact. May contain highlighting, inscriptions or notations. We offer a no-hassle guarantee on all our items. Orders generally ship by the next business day. Default Text
| Ch. 1 | The Ionian Enchantment | 3 |
| Ch. 2 | The Great Branches of Learning | 8 |
| Ch. 3 | The Enlightenment | 14 |
| Ch. 4 | The Natural Sciences | 45 |
| Ch. 5 | Ariadne's Thread | 66 |
| Ch. 6 | The Mind | 96 |
| Ch. 7 | From Genes to Culture | 125 |
| Ch. 8 | The Fitness of Human Nature | 164 |
| Ch. 9 | The Social Sciences | 181 |
| Ch. 10 | The Arts and Their Interpretation | 210 |
| Ch. 11 | Ethics and Religion | 238 |
| Ch. 12 | To What End? | 266 |
| Notes | 299 | |
| Acknowledgments | 321 | |
| Index | 323 |
On Monday, April 6th, barnesandnoble.com welcomed Edward O. Wilson, author of CONSILIENCE.
Edward O. Wilson: The idea of unity of knowledge which I am calling consilience is a word which began at the very dawn of Greek times, with Thales of Miletus, of Ionia, who proposed that all the universe is made of water. He was wrong, of course, but the idea of the world composed of discreet elements that could be understood by progressing from simplicity to complexity became a cornerstone of Western thought. In my own epiphany -- which has been repeated in different versions so many times in so many people of past centuries -- the Ionian enchantment came with my personal discovery of the theory of evolution by natural selection. That is one of the two great unifying and driving ideas of the biological sciences, that all life evolves from early forms of life and principally by natural selection. The other great driving idea is that all life has a material basis and is obedient to laws of physics and chemistry.
Edward O. Wilson: Good question. My religious background is fundamentalist Christianity, in particular, Southern Baptism. This is apart from the theology and the mythic structure of a very unifying view of the universe. When I shifted my own thinking as a college student to a secular metaphysics, I was naturally predisposed to seek in a new form a similar unifying view of the world. There is nothing very unusual about this kind of connection between early religious or other intellectual background and the adoption of a unifying material view of the world. Among giants of the past in science, Newton was interested in reading the two books of the universe -- the one was of space and motion, and the other book was that of God, which he hoped to decode. In that he was considerably less successful. Einstein was deeply affected by the poetic vision of Goethe.
Edward O. Wilson: The vision of unity on the basis of existing knowledge in the Enlightenment in the 19th century was an illusion, because the available specific knowledge required to create a full webwork of causal explanation was not available. What has happened in the 20th century is that the true specialization and the acquisition of vastly greater amounts of knowledge has made possible the webworks of causal explanation that unify the sciences. Today there is such a webwork extending from quantum physics to molecular biology, reagent chemistry, and now to the disciplines of extreme complexity, ecology, and brain sciences. In other words, the specialization of armies of science over two centuries has permitted the emergence of holistic synthesis all across the natural sciences.
Edward O. Wilson: No. I wish that I could claim that I had this great vision of the unity of knowledge, but it was the other way around. I started as a naturalist -- in fact, I still am -- fascinated by insects and other animals and plants; focused on ants as a principle group for scientific study as a student; progressed into wider issues of social organization; eventually attempted a synthesis of existing knowledge of social behavior in all animals; couldn't stop myself and progressed on to human behavior. It ended up with a deep interest in ants and other small animals along with the broad questions of the human sciences.
Edward O. Wilson: I don't believe that today sociobiology, which is also known as evolutionary psychology, is controversial. It was extreme in the 1970s when I first attempted a synthesis of it, and the primary reasons it created so much heat at that time were twofold First, we really didn't have much information on human behavioral genetics and the functioning of the brain. Now we do, and the evidence leans strongly towards the idea of a biological basis of human social behavior. The other reason for resistance in the 70s was distaste over the idea that human beings are organic machines. Nowadays this is less repellent a notion, partly because through science we are learning just how magnificent and adaptable those organic machines are.
Edward O. Wilson: Traditional religious belief with unquestioning obedience to authority and dogma have always conferred Darwinian advantage to belong to a group of tightly organized tribesmen united in single purpose; the belief in divine sanction has always been a better way to survive and reproduce your genes than free thought and independent action in a world dominated by warring tribes. It is natural to suppose that human beings are hereditarily disposed to gravitate towards such belief systems, but this worldview, as powerful and as practically efficient as it has been for millennia, is increasingly contradicted by the secular worldview of the material universe being developed by science. That is the heart of the conflict.
Edward O. Wilson: No, at least not of a deistic God who set the universe into being. But it does seem possible to establish one way or the other whether or not divine intervention was needed or is in any way evident in the evolutionary unfolding of the universe that followed. So we may find -- in fact, many natural scientists believe we have found -- that the most complex systems including the human species could have been self-assembled without direct divine guidance.
Edward O. Wilson: Unfortunately xenophobia appears to be the dark side of the force; in other words, people find it very easy, for reasons that are now easily explained by genetic or sociobiological theory, to be altruistic to members of their own group, and especially kin. They find it equally easy for reasons that are not hard to explain to be suspicious and react with hair-trigger hostility to unfriendly behavior from members outside their group. The combination of these instincts has great survival value for individuals but is the primary source of tribal antagonism and war throughout history.
Edward O. Wilson: Yes, unfortunately.
Edward O. Wilson: I have heard that distinction made before, and I am not sure just what it means. If knowing means emotional feeling and nonrational sensory experience, which of course are extremely important parts of human consciousness, then I suppose that's more knowing than understanding. But the whole point of consilience in this realm (which you can read in the chapter on the arts in the book) is that we have the prospect of understanding knowing. If we understand the nature of knowing, then this would represent a conjunction of some of the best advances in science and the humanities.
Edward O. Wilson: I believe that you may be referring to the Theory of Everything, also known as TOE, which is envisioned as the final perfect theory of physics. You will get a lot of debate on the prospect of TOE among physicists. But if that great achievement is made, it does not lead immediately to an explanation of all of the ways in which elementary particles, atoms, and molecules are assembled into organisms and thinking brains. What I believe a fully consilient explanation will show is that a complete theory of physics is foundational to chemistry, biology, and even the social sciences, but its laws and principles by themselves, naked and alone, cannot account for the assembly of the more complex systems to which the energies of the other natural sciences are directed.
Edward O. Wilson: The natural sciences are related to the humanities in the attention and deeper understanding they promise and, in fact, are achieving of human nature, the evolved genetic predispositions of social behavior that lead to the quite idiosyncratic universals of human culture. It is vital to explore this connection, in my opinion, because knowledge of it will be more instructive for moral and legal systems -- both in human relations and the environment -- than ignorance and progression by dead reckoning.
Edward O. Wilson: Not if your premise were correct. But what fuller knowledge of how the world works and of how human societies evolve and create culture opens opportunities and increases options; it doesn't close them. Innovation and individual development are stunted by political ideologies and traditional religions that insist on narrow, poorly informed views of the world and how it works. They are improved as knowledge and intellectual freedom open new avenues of research and learning.
Edward O. Wilson: Thank you very much.
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