Annotation:Annotationen:Teleology and the Concepts of Causation/K17t843xij

From DigiVis
Jump to: navigation, search
Annotation of Annotationen:Teleology_and_the_Concepts_of_Causation
Annotation Comment
Last Modification Date 2019-12-11T13:51:20.797Z
Last Modification User User:Sarah Oberbichler
Annotation Metadata
^"permissions":^"read":ӶӺ,"update":ӶӺ,"delete":ӶӺ,"admin":ӶӺ°,"user":^"id":6,"name":"Sarah Oberbichler"°,"id":"K17t843xij","ranges":Ӷ^"start":"/divӶ3Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ","startOffset":357,"end":"/divӶ3Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ","endOffset":1127°Ӻ,"quote":"This Aristotelian insight is not a bit archaic, it merely tends to be overlooked nowadays. Most of the questions of how the theory of evolution relates to other scientific theories could be answered by the simple observation that it implicitly involves the principle Aristotle characterized as the material cause. Natural selection bears on populations of organisms whose individual properties and capabilities are provided by accidental variation. The selective procedure operates through the environment whose constraints determine which among the individually different organisms survive and which do not. The environment cannot generate the material, i.e., the population that comprises viable and non-viable variations, it only ‘chisels away’ those that do not fit.","highlights":Ӷ^"jQuery32106899300131467512":^°°Ӻ,"text":"","order":"mw-content-text","category":"Prämisse3","data_creacio":1576068680351°