- Monday 19 October 2009
- 7.00pm start
- Lecturers: Dr Fern Elsdon-Baker
Join us for a drink in the café as we continue our informal café scientifique discussion events.
October's cafe scientifique looks at the history of evolutionary theory, and the influence of one man on the public perception of Darwin's groundbreaking theory. Author of ‘The Selfish Genius' Fern Elsdon-Baker, will take a provocative and entertaining look at famous evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins' highly popular neo-Darwinist theories. Dawkins' book ‘The Selfish Gene' was a smash hit in the 70s, single-handedly wrestling the evolutionary debate from the hands of scientists and placing it in the hands of the public. Dawkins' passion and vision make his books important reading, but, thirty years on, Elsdon-Baker fears that the Dawkins Discussion has become the Dawkins Discourse, an outdated and prescriptive way of understanding evolution that actually restricts debate rather than exciting it.
As a rational pro-science atheist and specialist in the history and communication of evolutionary theory, Fern Elsdon-Baker will attempt to disassemble the Dawkins myth and method that has monopolised the popular understanding of evolutionary development for the latter half of the twentieth century. Richard Dawkins, she argues, was the typical ‘Enlightenment Gent,' an outdated and uncompromising figurehead that wielded the broad sword of popular Science in a violent attempt to silence any evolutionary narrative that wasn't his own.
Our cafés are hosted by Dr Peter J Bentley.
Listen to the audio archive of this event:
http://ri.content.s3.amazonaws.com/podcasts/2009/October/19 TheSelfishGenius.mp3