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  1. Judgment Day.Louis Pascal - 1986 - In Peter Singer (ed.), Applied Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. 105--123.
  2.  23
    Human tragedy and natural selection.Louis Pascal - 1978 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 21 (1-4):443 – 460.
    It is argued that too logical a mind is not favored by natural selection; rather, it is biologically useful to be able to rationalize away certain unpleasant aspects of reality. In most cases this irrationality has to do either with our reproductive ideas or with our ways of viewing the future. In both cases the implications with regard to our ability to solve the current population growth/resource shrinkage crisis are decidedly negative. Looked at from a slightly different perspective, this same (...)
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    Ii. rejoinder to gray and Wolfe.Louis Pascal - 1980 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 23 (2):242 – 251.
    This rejoinder to J. Patrick Gray's and Linda Wolfe's 'The Loving Parent Meets the Selfish Gene' (Inquiry, this issue), which in turn was in response to the author's 'Human Tragedy and Natural Selection' (Inquiry, Vol. 21, No. 4), briefly addresses their major objections and suggests that in many instances they have misunderstood the point of that paper. They argue that many of the traits referred to are more cultural than genetic. That this is not the central issue is made clearer (...)
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