Godfrey-Smith...is possessed of a prodigious curiosity. His capacity for fascination is both a blessing and a minor curse ... It is easy to get lost in Godfrey-Smith’s thickets of digressions ... Godfrey-Smith makes compelling points about the horrors of factory farming and the urgency of habitat destruction, but these topics are too weighty and complex to squeeze neatly into some 60-odd pages ... Still, Living on Earth is a work of moral philosophy in more ways than one. It is best read, I think, as an ethical exemplar ... Godfrey-Smith is sober, precise and impressively scientifically informed, but even such a no-nonsense thinker cannot resist metaphors of personification when confronted with the riches of the natural world.
Read Full Review >>