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Care on Earth: generating informed concern

Date

2010

Authors

Rolston, Holmes, 1932-, author
Cambridge University Press, publisher

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Generating beings that can care requires much complexity. DNA is best interpreted as a cybernetic process that selects for caring. In spontaneous wild nature, the processes that generate such concern have locally a narrow focus, self-survival of the organism. More inclusively, these processes generate ecosystemic networks in which life is elaborated in richness in biodiversity and biocomplexity, elaborated forms of caring. In humans, this focus is exceeded with more inclusive forms of caring. Such wider vision requires a complex brain that can, with a theory of mind, evaluate others with concern for their integrity. Humans, alone on the planet, can take a transcending overview of the whole--and care for life on Earth. The sciences trace the evolution of such escalating concern, but more complete explanations requires metaphysical and theological perspectives.

Description

Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-245).

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Subject

evolutionary natural history
DNA
science and religion
caring
information
cybernetics
complexity
biodiversity
biocomplexity
theory of mind

Citation

Associated Publications