Beyondism: Religion from ScienceExpanding on his earlier work, Cattell applies the Beyondist viewpoint to major ethical questions. Starting from the premise that evolution is the fundamental process present in the universe, he explains that human evolution is governed by natural selection among groups, which in turn, is based upon genetic and cultural selection among individuals. Since natural selection of individuals is directed toward forming a viable group, the genetic and cultural shaping of individuals must fit the survival conditions of the group. The goal of Beyondism is to find these ethical and cultural conditions that are necessary for successful evolutionary adaptation and advancement. |
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Page 43
... gene pools and cultural patterns will be highly complicated by reason of the above - mentioned interaction effects which occur first within the two parts themselves : ( 1 ) the hybrid interaction in the gene pool and ( 2 ) the hybrid ...
... gene pools and cultural patterns will be highly complicated by reason of the above - mentioned interaction effects which occur first within the two parts themselves : ( 1 ) the hybrid interaction in the gene pool and ( 2 ) the hybrid ...
Page 186
... gene pools from the mixture of Pleistocene races that have occupied them , and it is these developments of new gene pools that principally concern the goal of creating new racial diversification . The question of what to construct in its ...
... gene pools from the mixture of Pleistocene races that have occupied them , and it is these developments of new gene pools that principally concern the goal of creating new racial diversification . The question of what to construct in its ...
Page 270
... gene pool which may represent either a relatively pure race as com- monly defined or , more commonly , some particular mixture of races constitut- ing the genetic pool of a particular country . The problems are only in the ...
... gene pool which may represent either a relatively pure race as com- monly defined or , more commonly , some particular mixture of races constitut- ing the genetic pool of a particular country . The problems are only in the ...
Contents
Preface | vii |
Among Groups Not Individuals? | x |
What Has Group Competition To Do With Ethics | 13 |
Copyright | |
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accept adjustment advance adventure altruism argument assortive mating average basic behavior Beyondism Beyondist ethics biological birth rate Buddhism called Cattell Chap Chapter Christianity civilization common competition complex concept concerned countries crystallized intelligence cultural evolution demands democracy democratic discussed dysgenic economic effect elite emotional environment equal ergic ethical system ethical values eugenic evolution evolutionary example existing feeling liberals fluid intelligence gene pool genetic and cultural genetic engineering genetic lag goal group survival Hedonic human human evolution ical individual intellectual intelligence interaction intergroup invention laws mankind means ment meritocracy moral mutations natural selection organization p-culture particular patterns political population possible present principle probably problem progress psychological psychology question race racial recognize relative religious requires revealed religions scientific scientists society sociobiology species spiritual values superego syntality tion traits universalistic religions universe within-group