Nature and History

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A01=Ignazio Masulli
Active Synthesis
adaptive systems theory
Author_Ignazio Masulli
Biological Processes
Category=JM
Category=PDX
Category=WNW
Chance Element
Charles Darwin
Cognitive Process
Conception of Reality
Darwin's Theory of Evolution
Empirical Evidence
empirical social science
Engels's Attempt
Engels’s Attempt
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eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
Evolution Studies
evolutionary approach
evolutionary model in social sciences
Evolutionary Paradigm
Evolutionary Theory
Galilean Telescope
General Organizational Conditions
historical methodology
Historical Phenomena
Innate Mental Tendencies
Inorganic Nature
Interdisciplinary Research
Logical Mathematical Knowledge
Logical Mathematical Structures
Logico Mathematical Structurations
Man Nature Relationship
Man's Cultural Evolution
Man’s Cultural Evolution
Mere Chance
Mere Relation
Methodological Minority
morphological analysis
Natural History
Natural Sciences
Nature
Perceptive Communicative Ability
Psychological Processes
Reflective Abstractions
scientific paradigms
Social Scientists
socio-biological synthesis
Socio-historical Sciences
Stratified Configuration
Subject Object Interaction
System Environment Relationship
Unstable Dynamical Systems
Vice Versa
XVIII Century

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367260361
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1990, Nature and History examines how Darwin’s theory of evolution has been expanded by scholars and researchers to include virtually every scientific discipline. The book presents a morphological analysis of historical and social sciences – sciences which have traditionally have been viewed as too random in their progressions to conform to a model. Through the evaluation of empirical and factual evidence, the book builds a case for an evolutionary paradigm which encompasses both natural and social sciences, and presents the form’s adaptiveness in working historical models.

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