Crisis is the Father of All Things. Punctuated Equilibrium as a Philosophical Concept (Part one: from Metaphysics to the Evolution of Cosmos and the Biosphere)

Jacek Breczko

Abstract


In this article, I present a holistic view of a crisis, referring to Gould’s concept of “punctuated equilibrium” and making its philosophical extrapolation: from dynamic metaphysical approaches, through the evolution of cosmos, to the evolution of the biosphere (in the next article, I intend to present a similarly framed history of mankind). I argue that evolution on different levels of being occurs in a similar “rhythm.” In the first phase, the object (structure) is in a state of relative balance and slow (gradual) changes. This phase ends with a catastrophe, some sudden event (an external blow or an internal “rupture”), initiating a phase of rapid change that can be described as a crisis in the broad sense. These violent transformations grow until they reach a critical moment, a moment of culmination and solstice, which can be called a crisis in the strict sense. After this crisis, there is either the disintegration of the object (“death”), or the survival, but of the object already clearly changed. A new quality (a new whole) appears, which returns to a state of relative balance and slow changes. I also point to the resistance that such a dynamic vision of being elicited from philosophers, astronomers, and naturalists, suggesting that this sympathy for constancy is a variety of Baconian tribal idols.


Keywords


crisis; punctuated equilibrium; Stephen Jay Gould; metaphysics; cosmos; biosphere

Full Text:

PDF (Język Polski)

References


Boehme, Jakob. Mysterium ziemskie i niebieskie. Tłum. dr. JOD. Warszawa: s.n., 1910.

Gajda, Janina. Pitagorejczycy. Warszawa: Wiedza Powszechna, 1996.

Gould, Stephen Jay. Niewczesny pogrzeb Darwina. Wybór esejów. Tłum. Nina Kancewicz-Hoffman. Warszawa: Prószyński i S-ka, 1999.

Gulian, Constantin Ionescu. Hegel czyli filozofia kryzysu. Tłum. Maria Ochab, Stanisław Cichowicz. Warszawa: PWN, 1974.

Heller, Michał. Ewolucja kosmosu i kosmologii. Warszawa: PWN, 1985.

Heller, Michał. „Zagadnienia kosmologiczne przed Einsteinem”. Zagadnienia Filozoficzne w Nauce 2005, nr XXXVII: 32–40.

Houlgate, Stephen. An Introduction to Hegel, Freedom, Truth and History. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, 2005.

Kołakowski, Leszek. Mini-wykłady o maxi-sprawach. Seria druga. Kraków: Znak, 1999.

Koselleck, Reinhart. Krytyka i kryzys. Studium patogenezy świata mieszczańskiego. Tłum. Jakub Duraj, Marcin Moskalewicz. Warszawa: Fundacja Res Publica im. H. Krzeczkowskiego, 2015.

Kwiatek, Łukasz. Hutton, Lyell i Smith. Geologia staje się nauką, https://www.wielkiepytania.pl/article/hutton-lyell-i-smith-geologia-staje-sie-nauka/ (dostęp: 04.04.2023).

Pabjan, Tadeusz. „Paradoks grawitacyjny”. Zagadnienia Filozoficzne w Nauce 2011, nr XLVIII: 111–126.

Ryszkiewicz, Marcin. „Wielki spór o wielkie wymieranie. Cz. I”. Przegląd Geologiczny 34, nr 1 (1986): 20–27.

Ryszkiewicz, Marcin. „Wielki spór o wielkie wymieranie. Cz. II”. Przegląd Geologiczny 34, nr 2 (1986): 78–82.

Szczerba, Wojciech. „Śmierć i nie-śmiertelność w mitologii greckiej. Podstawy filozoficznej koncepcji apokatastazy duszy”. Theological Wratislaviensia 2008, t. 3: 103–118.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/kw.2023.35.31-57
Date of publication: 2023-07-31 22:24:23
Date of submission: 2023-05-02 18:54:59


Statistics


Total abstract view - 167
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF (Język Polski) - 0

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2023 Jacek Breczko

License URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.pl