I’d recommend to others to keep philosophy of science in mind. Philosophy of biology doesn’t have the nicest things to say about evolutionary psychology (at least relative to other scientific disciplines). It’s not about throwing evopsych out, it’s about understanding its limitations in informing us about human nature.
Also, keep in mind an interesting truth I’ve noticed: you might feel in some cases that you’re “in the truth.” But that itself is qualitatively a culture like any other. If you justify a hierarchy based on, say, evopsych, you’re not “in the truth”, you’re in yet another a culture that justifies its inequalities through a story (even if that story is scientific and truthful).
Sounds great. Loving this so far.
I’d recommend to others to keep philosophy of science in mind. Philosophy of biology doesn’t have the nicest things to say about evolutionary psychology (at least relative to other scientific disciplines). It’s not about throwing evopsych out, it’s about understanding its limitations in informing us about human nature.
Also, keep in mind an interesting truth I’ve noticed: you might feel in some cases that you’re “in the truth.” But that itself is qualitatively a culture like any other. If you justify a hierarchy based on, say, evopsych, you’re not “in the truth”, you’re in yet another a culture that justifies its inequalities through a story (even if that story is scientific and truthful).
Edit: Adding the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on evolutionary psychology: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/evolutionary-psychology/