1st Edition

Biologising the Social Sciences Challenging Darwinian and Neuroscience Explanations

Edited By David Canter, David Turner Copyright 2014
    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    You can hardly open a paper or read an academic journal without some attempt to explain an aspect of human behaviour or experience by reference to neuroscience, biological or evolutionary processes. This ‘biologising’ has had rather a free ride until now, being generally accepted by the public at large. However, there is a growing number of scholars who are challenging the assumption that we are little more than our bodies and animal origins. This volume brings together a review of these emerging critiques expressed by an international range of senior academics from across the social sciences. Their arguments are firmly based in the empirical, scientific tradition. They show the lack of logic or evidence for many ‘biologising’ claims, as well as the damaging effects these biological assumptions can have on issues such as dealing with dyslexia or treating alcoholism. This important book, originally published as a special issue of Contemporary Social Science, contributes to a crucial debate on what it means to be human.

    "This collection of articles by David Canter and his colleagues, rigorously argued and richly informative […] are of immense importance. It is astonishing that, as Canter puts it in his brilliant overview of biologising trends […] there are those in the humanities who need to be reminded "that human beings can talk and interact with each other, generating cultures and societies that have an existence that cannot be reduced to their mere mechanical parts".  

    Professor Raymond Tallis FRCP FMedSci DLitt LittD in the Preface.

    Preface Raymond Tallis

    1. Challenging neuroscience and evolutionary explanations of social and psychological processes David Canter

    2. The evolution of consciousness Max Velmans

    3. The biological myth of human evolution Jonathan Marks

    4. Defining addiction, with more humanity? Woody Caan

    5. Education and neuroscience David A. Turner

    6. The mismeasurement of youth: why adolescent brain science is bad science Judith Bessant and Rob Watts

    7. Disordered selves Richard S. Hallam

    8. Biologising reading problems: the specific case of dyslexia João Lopes

    9. Postscript: The ethics of Darwinism David Turner and David Canter

    Biography

    David Canter is Professor of Psychology at the University of Huddersfield, UK.

    David Turner is Professor Emeritus at the University of Glamorgan, UK.