Mary Midgley has died at the ripe age of 99. She was a staunch critic of 'scientism' not from the perspective of religion but of humanism (and in that respect, somewhat similar in her views to her younger compatriot Raymond Tallis.) Her Guardian profile page is here. — Wayfarer
she has a rather school-marmly style, but overall I found her writing immensely congenial. — Wayfarer
I’ve found her books extremely refreshing and persuasive. — Brett
I’ve found her books extremely refreshing and persuasive. — Brett
I’ve read ‘Beast and Man’, ‘Wickedness’ and ‘Heart and Mind’. The last seems to require more concentration than ‘Beast and Man’, but that could be me. But there is certainly nothing complicated in her. Of all the people I’ve read she appeals the most. — Brett
I read her Evolution as a Religion about ten years ago. Didn’t read another of her books but a number of online essays. — Wayfarer
[ Midgley ] didn't start her public career until she was in her 50's and then published for half a century! That's something. — Wayfarer
Raymond Tallis. He's really good, too. I actually emailed him about one of his books, and he answered. Look into him also. — Wayfarer
What interested me about Mary Midgley was her ideas on morality — Brett
...we don’t have a ready-made system priority system to deal with our conflicts, but that we must find one, we cannot live without some kind of morality. — Brett
Her disagreement with Dawkins seemed to be against ‘the selfish gene’, the idea that altruism was an act of survival and not of our moral nature. That society was built not through people caring about one another but through caring as a selfish act. How could you even pretend to care about someone if you had no idea what caring was? — Brett
Mary Midgley has died at the ripe age of 99. She was a staunch critic of 'scientism' not from the perspective of religion but of humanism (and in that respect, somewhat similar in her views to her younger compatriot Raymond Tallis.) Her Guardian profile page is here. — Wayfarer
If she was so smart she wouldn't have died. — Hanover
What interested me about Mary Midgley was her ideas on morality; that we were moral creatures, even though we did not always act morally, and that we are social creatures. — Brett
So for her it was a fight against relativism, against the idea of morality being subjective. She was adamant that we could not shift the blame onto the idea of ‘culture’. — Brett
'A fight against relativism' suggests to me that she was an absolutist. A black and white thinker.
That's not the impression I had formed in my mind.
What 'blame' is being talked of here? — Amity
My impression is that she meant that our morality is not subjective, that it is not relative to different cultures or ideas, that it is common to all people and behind our social evolution.
In regards to ‘culture’ she meant that our acts that have been so abhorrent, our behaviour, are not the results of our culture, as if it was something removed from us and directed our behaviour, but are the acts of an animal quite capable of appalling acts. — Brett
Ask 'Philosophy Now' - It's their review on Amazon. — Amity
I don’t know. — Brett
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