The Evolutionary Ethics of Alfred C. Kinsey

History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 24 (3/4):391 - 411 (2002)
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Abstract

It is commonplace to point out that Alfred Kinsey's taxonomic work on gall wasps provided a methodology for his studies of human sexual behavior. It is equally commonplace to point out that, when researching and presenting his sexual studies, Kinsey's professedly neutral scientific data were constrained by a social agenda. What I have done in this paper is to join these two claims and demonstrate, with particular reference to Kinsey's Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, how his zoology helped guide Kinsey to a naturalistic ethics that, despite contrasts to, shared certain parallel logical failures with the traditional ethics of his critics

Other Versions

reprint Churchill, Frederick B. (2005) "The Evolutionary Ethics of Alfred C. Kinsey". In Koertge, Noretta, Scientific Values and Civic Virtues, pp. : OUP Usa (2005)

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