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Wholes that cause their parts: organic self-reproduction and the reality of biological teleology
Authors:Teufel Thomas
Affiliation:a Department of Philosophy, VC 5-288, Baruch College, The City University of New York, One Bernard Baruch Way, New York, NY 10010, USA
Abstract:A well-rehearsed move among teleological realists in the philosophy of biology is to base the idea of genuinely teleological forms of organic self-reproduction on a type of causality derived from Kant. Teleological realists have long argued for the causal possibility of this form of causality--in which a whole is considered the cause of its parts--as well as formulated a set of teleological criteria of adequacy for it. What is missing, to date, is an account of the mereological principles that govern the envisioned whole-to-part causality. When the latter principles are taken into account, we find that there is no version of whole-to-part causality that is mereologically, causally and teleologically possible all at once, as teleological realism requires.
Keywords:Teleological realism   Intrinsic purposiveness   Immanuel Kant   Peter McLaughlin   Downward causality   Mereology
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