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digest 1998-06-09 #001.txt
Monday
From: "Society for Literature & Science"
Daily SLS Email Digest
-> New email forum on Darwin and Darwinism
by Robert Maxwell Young
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: 8 Jun 1998 09:41:46 -0700
From: Robert Maxwell Young
Subject: New email forum on Darwin and Darwinism
Darwin and Darwinism is a forum for discussion of any and all matters
concerned with evolution. This means Darwin, his life and theories,
Darwinian scholarship, including other approaches to evolution in the
past
and present. It is also intended to include findings, debates, concepts
and
philosophical disscussions about Darwinian ideas in other disciplines,
including, for example, Darwinian psychology, social science,
epistemology
and the relevance of Darwinism to moral, cultural, social, political
and
ideological matters.
One of the aims of the forum is to provide a place where different
disciplines and points of view which often do not make much contact can
debate in a single space. This means that sharp disagreements are very
likely. The forum leaders are determined that these will be condicted in
a
civil manner.
Forum Moderator: Robert M. Young
Editor, _Science as Culture_
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
Co-Moderator: Ian Pitchford
Ian.Pitchford@mcmail.com
Research Student, University of Sheffield
To join the forum, send an email message
To: listproc@sheffield.ac.uk
Body of message: subscribe darwin-and-darwinism yourname
__________________________________________
In making a personal reply, please put in Subject line: Message for Bob
Young
Robert Maxwell Young: robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk or
r.m.young@sheffield.ac.uk
26 Freegrove Rd., London N7 9RQ, Eng. tel.+44 171 607 8306 fax.+44 171
609
4837. Professor of Psychotherapy and Psychoanalytic Studies, Centre for
Psychotherapeutic Studies, University of Sheffield. Home page and
writings:
http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/N-Q/psysc/staff/rmyoung/index.html
Process Press publications: http://www.shef.ac.uk/~psysc/process_press/
'One must imagine Sisyphus happy.' - Camus