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Organisms and Their Evolution

Agency and Meaning in the Drama of Life

Stephen L Talbott

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English
Nature Institute
11 November 2025
Every organism is a striving agent. It insistently pursues its own meanings and purposes in the manner of its species. This is true, not only of animal behavior (as seen in our pets), but all the way down to the molecular and cellular levels. Whether a cell is dividing - becoming two cells, with each daughter cell re-organizing itself as a living entity - or replicating its DNA, or carrying out the infinitely varying work of metabolism, it is always directing its activity with a remarkable wisdom. Is this future-oriented organizing ability really irrelevant to evolution, as so many seem to think today?

During much of the 20th century, biologists, bound by the repressive doctrine of Behaviorism, could not speak of the human mind. And when, during the last decades of the century, the taboo was finally shattered, it gave rise to what is now called the ""Cognitive Revolution,"" and along with it an invigorating renewal of consciousness studies. When biologists break through the taboo against reckoning with their own descriptive language of meaning and purpose - when they can openly acknowledge every organism's agency, as they are showing early signs of doing today - the consequences for our understanding of biology and evolution may dwarf those of the Cognitive Revolution. These consequences are what this book is about.
By:  
Imprint:   Nature Institute
Dimensions:   Height: 254mm,  Width: 178mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   894g
ISBN:   9780974490687
ISBN 10:   0974490687
Pages:   520
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Stephen l. Talbott is a senior researcher at The Nature Institute in Ghent, New York, having joined the Institute's staff in 1998. Before he became affiliated with the Institute, and after a decade working in the software engineering organizations of computer manufacturers, he was a senior editor at the technical book publisher, O'Reilly and Associates (now O'Reilly Media).

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