ABSTRACT

This book explains the background and meaning of Kant’s account of the life sciences in the Critique of the Power of Judgement by reading the development of Kant’s ideas on the living since his 1763 precritical essays, in parallel with analyzing several milestones in the constitution of the concept of organism as a self-organized totality, studied by biology.

This parallel reading frames Kant’s account of biology against influential theories developed by earlier scientists and naturalists, including Leibniz, Stahl, French vitalists, Albrecht von Haller, Caspar Wolff, and Buffon, as well as his almost contemporaries such as Goethe and Cuvier. It reveals that Kant’s inquiry about teleological judgment ties in with important advances in his time about the organism as an integrated, functioning, and self-organizing entity. It explains how Kant’s idea of purposiveness, formulated in the context of a metaphysical inquiry about the order of the world and its knowledge, hence of contingency generaliter, became detached from the notion of intention, thus ascribing it a new meaning tied to autonomous biological practice. Then, considering 19th-century biologists, it provides the genealogy of a post-Darwinian theoretical space in which biologists formulate complementary or competing accounts of organisms as developmental systems in evolution and within which theoretical cleavages are generated. It thereby explains how the two theoretical trends known as form-centered and function-centered biology, now defined as “developmental” and “adaptationist“ viewpoints, emerged as two distinct perspectives from a concept of “natural purposiveness” unified by Kant’s transcendental perspective; then it unravels the way they currently articulate, against the background of their genesis.

When Metaphysics Meets Biology offers a philosophical interpretation of the emergence of biology in relation to Kant’s thinking and sheds light on the philosophical issues currently embedded within the conceptual structure of biology. It is of interest to philosophers of biology and philosophers interested in metaphysics and its history.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

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part 1|132 pages

The emergence of a science of life and the Kantian interest in the philosophical problem of life before the third Critique

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chapter 1|40 pages

First conditions for the concept of organism: disruptions

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Leibniz, Stahl, and the critiques of mechanism
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chapter 2|32 pages

Second condition for the concept of organism: Vital properties and vitalism

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The animal economy model
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chapter 4|32 pages

Vital forces and epigenesis

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part 2|152 pages

Meeting purposiveness

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chapter 6|38 pages

The problem of species and variations in the transformation of natural history

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Kant's encounter with the teleological question in biology
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chapter 7|33 pages

Life, soul, and body (again)

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chapter 8|43 pages

The critical elucidation of purposiveness in the Critique of the Power of Judgment

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The lawfulness of the contingent as such
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part 3|186 pages

Kant's theory of “organism” and its (biological and metaphysical) implications

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chapter 10|33 pages

Use of reflective teleology

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Originary organization, milieu, and type
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chapter 13|21 pages

Conclusion

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