That is an unfair characterization of Darwin’s work, there is no reason whatsoever to conclude that Darwinism said nature is inherently chaotic. Recognize that Darwin’s theory is a two-step process, only the first step in natural selection, the production of variation, is a matter of chance. The character of the second step, the actual selection, is progressive and directional. The concept of natural selection had remarkable power for explaining directional and adaptive changes, it pretty much explicitly said that evolution was not chaotic.
Im not sure you know what "chaotic" meant in the 19th century, or in a scientific term, cause thermodynamics also uses chaos in a non-intuitive way to us. These are a people who did not believe in accidents. Most Civil War Generals wrote at length how they believed in fate and that everything was out of their control.
The idea that random variations cause evolution and that we are here by chance was absolutely "chaotic" in that sense.
I don’t think that is a fair characterization of the Enlightenment either, “orderly, harmonious, and non-chaotic” certainly fits the point you are trying to make about Darwin, but it is more a characterization of the “resultant” ideas that emerged from the Enlightenment, particularly the Enlightenment’s development of the Newton’s physical sciences.
In what way is that not representative of the Enlightenment?
Darwin recognized the importance of the variations and their relationship to natural selection, but he did not know that chance mutation was the underlying mechanism. The scientific study of genetics, and the idea of random genetic mutations being the mechanism of variation came much later. He focused on the effects of natural selection and heritable variations, the idea that the underlying cause of those heritable variations was random genetic mutations didn’t really develop until the 20th century.
Darwin believed variations were random. Full stop, sure the genetics didnt come until later, but stop denying what he said.
Darwin stood squarely in the tradition of Enlightenment science of applying reason and observation while challenging traditional authority and promoting a more secular and rational worldview. Enlightenment science had developed Newton’s physics into an overly mechanistic view of the universe, but Darwin rigorously applied the scientific method to life, and the result challenged the traditional authority of Enlightenment’s Newtonian physics.
So...anti-enlightenment. lol.
Enlightenment science was at its peak of materialistic and deterministic hubris, and when Darwin applied the scientific method to life and found it did not fully conform to the mechanistic laws of matter that enlightenment science was uncompromisingly committed to.
Right...thanks for conceding.
What evolution contends about life is that life is contingent, probabilistic, and that it constitutes a unity, it says we are all interconnected to each other and to everything. In the study of life, there are no isolated systems and life is not deterministic
That is the opposite of reductionism-another core Enlightenment philosophy. You are literally proving my point over and over.
Darwin took Charles Lyell’s book with him on the Beagle, it was instrumental to Darwin’s development of the theory of evolution, especially his belief in gradual change. The two main clashes within biology were between chance or necessity, as far as biology was concerned, Darwin settled the question by demonstrating the dual nature of biological processes, it isn’t one or the other, it’s both in a two-step process, the variation step being dominated by randomness, the natural selection step by necessity.
There was no scientific/biological imperative for "randomness" until darwin and other probabilistic theories, especially in relation to ending a locus of control. Previously chance, insurance, etc was seen as something can be calculated and semi-controlled or something can be ultimately driven teleologically towards something. The darwinian revolution was that nature didnt care.
I don’t think so, I think Newton would have recognized that his physics is a predictive science of deterministic laws, and that evolutionary biology, in contrast with physics, is a historical science, it attempts to explain events and processes that have already taken place. He would have seen it as a different kind of science, one that constructs a historical narrative to explain observational evidence that the history of life was characterized by variation that progresses by the natural selection of favorable variations.
You don't understand enlightenment philosophers. This was a guy who wrote about magic more than science. If you think someone would show up and turn all enlightenment ideals on its head he would just shrug and say "ok"