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Robert M. Young Online Writings
'Malthus on Man - In Animals no Moral Restraint' 59k
Thirty years ago I wrote an article on the common context of biological and social
theory, using Malthus as a key text and exploring how various writers had read him and had
come up with very different conclusions: William Paley, Thomas Chalmers, Darwin, Wallace,
Spencer, Marx and Engels. This article generated a number of commentaries and refutations,
primarily seeking to disprove my conclusions about the connection between Darwin and
Malthus and the role of Malthus in the origination of Darwin's theory of evolution by
natural selection. I have stood my ground and have argued that quite a lot hangs on the
connection. On the occasion of the first invitation I have ever had to deliver a paper to
a conference of the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine (an ideologically and
personally antagonistic director having been forcibly retired), I took the opportinity to
reflect on this controversy, bring in some new evidence and draw philosophical conclusions
about the role of praxis in human nature, as sanctioned by the first professional social
scientist and the founder of modern evolutionary theory. I also urge modern Darwinians to
emulate these eminent forbearers in granting a role for praxis in human nature. The paper
was presented to a conference on 'Malthus, Medicine and Science' organised by Roy Porter
at the Wellcome Institute, London, on 20 March 1998.
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