G Archdall Reid - meaning and definition. What is G Archdall Reid
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What (who) is G Archdall Reid - definition

HYPOTHESIS THAT, IN THE COURSE OF EVOLUTION, SOME ENTIRELY NEW PROPERTIES, SUCH AS MIND AND CONSCIOUSNESS, APPEAR AT CERTAIN CRITICAL POINTS
Robert G. B. Reid

G. Archdall Reid         
BRITISH EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGIST (1860-1929)
George Archdall O'Brien Reid; George Archdall Reid; Sir George Archdall O'Brien Reid; Sir George Archdall Reid; Sir Archdall Reid
Sir George Archdall O'Brien Reid KBE FRSE (1860–1929) was a Scottish physician, and a writer on public health and on the subject of evolution. He was interested in the effects of alcohol on society, and in the evolution of races.
Henry Archdall         
ACADEMIC AND CLERGYMAN
H. K. Archdall; Henry Kingsley Archdall; Archdall, Henry
Henry Kingsley Archdall (2 March 1886 – 27 February 1976) was an Australian academic and clergyman. After teaching at Cambridge University, in Australia and in New Zealand, he became Principal of St David's College, Lampeter and Chancellor of St David's Cathedral, then headmaster of King's College, Auckland.
George Archdall-Gratwicke         
George John Archdall; George John Archdall-Gratwicke; George Archdall; George Archdall Gratwicke; George John Archdall Gratwicke
George John Archdall-Gratwicke (baptised 14 May 1787, in Spondon – 16 September 1871, in Cambridge), called George John Archdall until 1863, was an academic in the 19th century.University Intelligence The Times (London, England), Monday, Sep 18, 1871; pg.

Wikipedia

Emergent evolution

Emergent evolution is the hypothesis that, in the course of evolution, some entirely new properties, such as mind and consciousness, appear at certain critical points, usually because of an unpredictable rearrangement of the already existing entities. The term was originated by the psychologist C. Lloyd Morgan in 1922 in his Gifford Lectures at St. Andrews, which would later be published as the 1923 book Emergent Evolution.

The hypothesis has been widely criticized for providing no mechanism to how entirely new properties emerge, and for its historical roots in teleology. Historically, emergent evolution has been described as an alternative to materialism and vitalism.