The nature of humanness is discussed from observations made by Aristotle in 4th-century Greece, through to those of Charles Darwin, Teilhard de Chardin and William Shakespeare. Attempts to define humanness upon a narrow range of criteria, as some have tried, is argued as flawed, for humanness is more elusive than a single or a few demonstrated phenomena. The path that Darwin pursued in determining the place of humans in nature in his book The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex is assessed from a 19thcentury perspective; the difficulties he faced, both personally and with the broader public, are reviewed and then evaluated in a modern context. Darwin’s thesis adheres to scientific principles, and is debated, defended and later ...
“Light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history”: this was the single line that Charles D...
The core of the Darwinian cultural challenge is connected to three basic ideas, with experimental ev...
How shall we view our existence when we accept the realization that mankind is not the most importan...
The nature of humanness is discussed from observations made by Aristotle in 4th-century Greece, thro...
A significant contributor to the ongoing debate between science and religion is Pierre Teilhard de C...
Man asks many questions necessary to understand himself. Christianity teaches that God created man ...
MPhil, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2013Modernity as a philosophical and intellectua...
The notion of 'human nature' has long since captured the interest and imagination of philosophers, t...
As for…the origin of humans ’ apparently unique intellectual and physical characteristics – today’s ...
The human person is the focal point of contemporary concern. This first sentence from Andre Ligneul\...
Human nature was until recently put together with essences of biological species, chemical elements,...
This article compares the approach of the Brazilian philosopher Henrique Vaz to the ones of Charles ...
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin(1881 - 1955) is one of the most known men in the dialogue between natural...
'With all these exalted powers – Man still bears in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowl...
aBsTracT The publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species in 1859 created a paradigm shift from ...
“Light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history”: this was the single line that Charles D...
The core of the Darwinian cultural challenge is connected to three basic ideas, with experimental ev...
How shall we view our existence when we accept the realization that mankind is not the most importan...
The nature of humanness is discussed from observations made by Aristotle in 4th-century Greece, thro...
A significant contributor to the ongoing debate between science and religion is Pierre Teilhard de C...
Man asks many questions necessary to understand himself. Christianity teaches that God created man ...
MPhil, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2013Modernity as a philosophical and intellectua...
The notion of 'human nature' has long since captured the interest and imagination of philosophers, t...
As for…the origin of humans ’ apparently unique intellectual and physical characteristics – today’s ...
The human person is the focal point of contemporary concern. This first sentence from Andre Ligneul\...
Human nature was until recently put together with essences of biological species, chemical elements,...
This article compares the approach of the Brazilian philosopher Henrique Vaz to the ones of Charles ...
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin(1881 - 1955) is one of the most known men in the dialogue between natural...
'With all these exalted powers – Man still bears in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowl...
aBsTracT The publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species in 1859 created a paradigm shift from ...
“Light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history”: this was the single line that Charles D...
The core of the Darwinian cultural challenge is connected to three basic ideas, with experimental ev...
How shall we view our existence when we accept the realization that mankind is not the most importan...