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Since the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998, the image
projected of Northern Ireland in the mainstream media is frequently
that of a newly prosperous, modern, post-conflict society - a rare
example of a successful peace process. Promoted as a great place to
live and work, the garden seemed to be getting rosier by the day,
that is until the Stormont Assembly collapsed in 2017. Written to
coincide with the twentieth anniversary of the GFA, this book
argues that the seeds of recent problems were sown in the 1998
agreement. The fiasco of a Renewable Heating Incentive that
overpaid participants, the lingering whiff of corruption,
communities in crisis and growing poverty are all symptoms of the
inherent failings of the supposed settlement. Current difficulties
are more than teething problems arising from the transition from
war to peace and neo-liberalism; they're the first instalment of a
deeper crisis in a northern Irish state and society, which has
never properly addressed the corrosive nature of sectarianism.
Rather than ridding Northern Ireland of sectarianism,
neo-liberalism, operating in the absence of armed conflict, has
been able to accommodate and, in some instances, create a new form
of sectarianism. The GFA has led to a profound democratic deficit.
This book focuses on the nature of the North's new sectarian
political class who are the principal beneficiaries of the GFA, but
attention is also drawn to the labour movement, the plight of
precarious and migrant workers, and the undermining of third sector
autonomy. Behind the latter is the continuing suffering within
communities still impacted by the long period of armed conflict and
the evolution of republicanism and Unionism-Loyalism.
This major new series in the philosophy of science aims to provide
a new generation of textbooks for the subject. The series will not
only offer fresh treatments of core topics in the theory and
methodology of scientific knowledge, but also introductions to
newer areas of the discipline. Furthermore, the series will cover
topics in current science that raise significant foundational
issues both for scientific theory and for philosophy more
generally. Biology raises distinct questions of its own not only
for philosophy of science, but for metaphysics, epistemology and
ethics. This comprehensive new textbook for a rapidly growing field
of study provides students new to the subject with an up-to-date
presentation of the key philosophical issues. Care is taken
throughout to keep the technicalities accessible to the
non-biologist but without sacrificing the philosophical subtleties.
The first part of the book covers the philosophical challenges
posed by evolution and evolutionary biology, beginning with
Darwin's central argument in the Origin of the Species. Individual
chapters cover natural selection, the selfish gene, alternative
units of selection, developmental systems theory, adaptionism and
issues in macroevolution. The second part of the book examines
philosophical questions arising in connection with biological
traits, function, nature and nurture, and biological kinds. The
third part of the book examines metaphysical questions, biology's
relation with the traditional concerns of philosophy of science,
and how evolution has been introduced into epistemological debates.
The final part considers the relevance of biology to questions
about ethics, religion and human nature.
This major new series in the philosophy of science aims to provide
a new generation of textbooks for the subject. The series will not
only offer fresh treatments of core topics in the theory and
methodology of scientific knowledge, but also introductions to
newer areas of the discipline. Furthermore, the series will cover
topics in current science that raise significant foundational
issues both for scientific theory and for philosophy more
generally. Biology raises distinct questions of its own not only
for philosophy of science, but for metaphysics, epistemology and
ethics. This comprehensive new textbook for a rapidly growing field
of study provides students new to the subject with an up-to-date
presentation of the key philosophical issues. Care is taken
throughout to keep the technicalities accessible to the
non-biologist but without sacrificing the philosophical subtleties.
The first part of the book covers the philosophical challenges
posed by evolution and evolutionary biology, beginning with
Darwin's central argument in the Origin of the Species. Individual
chapters cover natural selection, the selfish gene, alternative
units of selection, developmental systems theory, adaptionism and
issues in macroevolution. The second part of the book examines
philosophical questions arising in connection with biological
traits, function, nature and nurture, and biological kinds. The
third part of the book examines metaphysical questions, biology's
relation with the traditional concerns of philosophy of science,
and how evolution has been introduced into epistemological debates.
The final part considers the relevance of biology to questions
about ethics, religion and human nature.
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