TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction 2
Chapter I: The Problem 11 I.0 Preliminary Statement 11 I.1 Clearing up the terms 12 I.2 Anthropomorphism and theology 16 I.3 Anthropocentrisms 30 I.4 Instructionism and engineering anthropomorphism 39
I.5 Lamarck 52
I.6 Anthropocentrism and ethics 56 I.7 “Isms” and anthropo-centrism/-morphism 63 I.8 Rorty’s challenge 66
Chapter II: Darwin and the Problem 70 II.1 Darwin and the “isms” 70 II.2 Darwin’s “philosophy of mind” 75 II.3 Materialism or naturalism? 80
II.4 Naturalisms 89
II.5 Darwin’s “Britishness” 103 II.6 Non-innocence? 115 II.7 “Arguing from man to animals is philosophical” 132 II.8 Analogy and continuity 149 II.9 Analogy at work 159
Chapter III: Aspects of the Problem after Darwin 167
III.1 Wallace 167
III.2 Gould 170
III.3 Antidarwinians, Darwinists, Darwinians 175 III.4 Edelman’s assumptions 184 III.5 Edelman and qualia 186 III.6 Objects and boundaries of scientific inquiry into consciousness 190 III.7 Damasio’s model 194 III.8 Features of Damasio’s inquiry into consciousness 196
III.9 Dennett 198
Conclusion 202