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Beast and Man

Midgley's 1978 debut — published at fifty-nine — that grounded human nature in biology without reducing it to mechanism, and introduced the distinction between cleverness and integration.
Beast and Man: The Roots of Human Nature (1978) was Mary Midgley's first book, published when she was fifty-nine. It launched what would become a sixty-year philosophical career and established the methodological commitments she would refine across more than fifteen subsequent books. The work argued that human beings are best understood as whole animals with a specific evolutionary history, embodied cognition, and a rich social and emotional life — not as disembodied rational minds contingently housed in biological machinery. The book was a response both to existentialist accounts that detached human freedom from biology and to behaviourist accounts that reduced human life to stimulus-response mechanisms. Midgley charted a third path: biology and meaning, nature and culture, as dimensions of a single integrated reality.
Beast and Man
Beast and Man

In The You On AI Field Guide

The book's thesis was provocative in 1978 and remains so. Midgley argued that human beings are genuinely animals — that our morality, our reasoning, our social bonds, and our sense of meaning

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