The Structure of Biological Science

The Structure of Biological Science
ISBN-10
052127561X
ISBN-13
9780521275613
Category
Science
Pages
281
Language
English
Published
1985-01-25
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Author
Alexander Rosenberg

Description

Preface p. ix Chapter 1 Biology and Its Philosophy p. 2 1.1 The Rise of Logical Positivism p. 2 1.2 The Consequences for Philosophy p. 4 1.3 Problems of Falsifiability p. 6 1.4 Philosophy of Science Without Positivism p. 8 1.5 Speculation and Science p. 10 Introduction to the Literature p. 11 Chapter 2 Autonomy and Provincialism p. 13 2.1 Philosophical Agendas versus Biological Agendas p. 13 2.2 Motives for Provincialism and Autonomy p. 18 2.3 Biological Philosophies p. 21 2.4 Tertium Datur? p. 25 2.5 The Issues in Dispute p. 30 2.6 Steps in the Argument p. 34 Introduction to the Literature p. 35 Chapter 3 Teleology and the Roots of Autonomy p. 37 3.1 Functional Explanations in Molecular Biology p. 39 3.2 The Search for Functions p. 43 3.3 Functional Laws p. 47 3.4 Directively Organized Systems p. 52 3.5 The Autonomy of Teleological Laws p. 59 3.6 The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Functional Explanation p. 62 3.7 Functional Explanation Will Always Be with Us p. 65 Introduction to the Literature p. 67 Chapter 4 Reductionism and the Temptation of Provincialism p. 69 4.1 Motives for Reductionism p. 69 4.2 A Triumph of Reductionism p. 73 4.3 Reductionism and Recombinant DNA p. 84 4.4 Antireductionism and Molecular Genetics p. 88 4.5 Mendel's Genes and Benzer's Cistrons p. 93 4.6 Reduction Obstructed p. 97 4.7 Qualifying Reductionism p. 106 4.8 The Supervenience of Mendelian Genetics p. 11 4.9 Levels of Organization p. 117 Introduction to the Literature p. 119 Chapter 5 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory p. 121 5.1 Is There an Evolutionary Theory? p. 122 5.2 The Charge of Tautology p. 126 5.3 Population Genetics and Evolution p. 130 5.4 Williams's Axiomatization of Evolutionary Theory p. 136 5.5 Adequacy of the Axiomatization p. 144 Introduction to the Literature p. 152 Chapter 6 Fitness p. 154 6.1 Fitness Is Measured by Its Effects p. 154 6.2 Fitness As a Statistical Propensity p. 160 6.3 The Supervenience of Fitness p. 164 6.4 The Evidence for Evolution p. 169 6.5 The Scientific Context of Evolutionary Theory p. 174 Introduction to the Literature p. 179 Chapter 7 Species p. 180 7.1 Operationalism and Theory in Taxonomy p. 182 7.2 Essentialism--For and Against p. 187 7.3 The Biological Species Notion p. 191 7.4 Evolutionary and Ecological Species p. 197 7.5 Species Are Not Natural Kinds p. 201 7.6 Species As Individuals p. 204 7.7 The Theoretical Hierarchy of Biology p. 212 7.8 The Statistical Character of Evolutionary Theory p. 216 7.9 Universal Theories and Case Studies p. 219 Introduction to the Literature p. 225 Chapter 8 New Problems of Functionalism p. 226 8.1 Functionalism in Molecular Biology p. 228 8.2 The Panglossian Paradigm p. 235 8.3 Aptations, Exaptations, and Adaptations p. 243 8.4 Information and Action Among the Macromolecules p. 246 8.5 Metaphors and Molecules p. 255 Bibliography p. 266 Index p. 273.

Similar books

  • Textbook of Structural Biology
    By Anders Liljas, Lars Liljas, Poul Nissen

    Vist MR, Davis JH. (1990) Phase equilibria of cholesterol/dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholinemixtures: 2H nuclear magnetic resonance and differential scanning calorimetry. Biochemistry 29:451–464.

  • Levels of Organization in the Biological Sciences
    By William C. Wimsatt, Daniel S. Brooks, James DiFrisco

    This volume examines the idea of levels of organization as a distinct object of investigation, considering its merits as a core organizational principle for the scientific image of the natural world.

  • Concepts of Biology
    By James Wise, Samantha Fowler, Rebecca Roush

    A strength of Concepts of Biology is that instructors can customize the book, adapting it to the approach that works best in their classroom.

  • Introduction to Molecular Biology
    By S Bresler

    This book is intended for both biologists and non-biologists who want to be acquainted with the advances made in molecular biology, molecular genetics, and molecular biophysics during the 1950s and 1960s.

  • Creating a Physical Biology: The Three-Man Paper and Early Molecular Biology
    By Phillip R. Sloan, Brandon Fogel

    Creating a Physical Biology makes the Three Man Paper available in English for the first time.

  • Essentials of Chemical Biology: Structure and Dynamics of Biological Macromolecules
    By Andrew D. Miller, Julian Tanner

    This book is an invaluable text for advanced undergraduates taking biological, bioorganic, organic and structural chemistry courses.

  • Textbook of Structural Biology
    By Anders Liljas, Lars Liljas, Jure Piskur

    Eriksson AE, Baase WA, Zhang X-J, Heinz DW, Blaber M, Baldwin EP Matthews BW. (1992) Response of a protein structure to cavity-creating mutations and its relation to the hydrophobic effect. Science: 255:178–183. Gassner NC, Baase WA, ...

  • An Introduction to Biological Membranes: Composition, Structure and Function
    By William Stillwell

    [32] Gautier A, Bernhard W, Oberling C. Sur l'existence d'un appareil lacunaire pericapillaire du glomerule de ... [60] Siegel BZ, McMurty G, Siegel SM, Chen J, LaRock P. Life in the calcium chloride environment of Don Juan pond, ...

  • Advances in Biological Science Research: A Practical Approach
    By Surya Nandan Meena, Milind Naik

    This book provides the latest technologies, advanced methods, and untapped research areas involved in diverse fields of biological science research such as bioinformatics, proteomics, microbiology, medicinal chemistry, and marine science.

  • Biological Science: A Molecular Approach
    By Biological Sciences Curriculum Study

    Biological Science: A Molecular Approach