Reduction, Explanation, and the Quests of Biological Research

A major theme in biological research is the quest for mechanism, embodied in explanatory reductionism: the interpretation of phenomena through links to the entities and laws of more fundamental sciences. For example, the form of Starling's Law of the Heart, relating contractile force to heart v...

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Veröffentlicht in:Philosophy of science 1986-09, Vol.53 (3), p.333-353
1. Verfasser: Robinson, Joseph D.
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description A major theme in biological research is the quest for mechanism, embodied in explanatory reductionism: the interpretation of phenomena through links to the entities and laws of more fundamental sciences. For example, the form of Starling's Law of the Heart, relating contractile force to heart volume, follows from the sliding-filament hypothesis of muscle contraction, a molecular concept. Although alternative mechanisms for muscle contraction and cardiac regulation could be deduced from biochemical principles, the formulation provides clear correspondence with the phenomena and a deeper understanding of cardiac function. Moreover, even if the reduction provides no better formulation of the phenomenon, of the macro-regularity, it is still prized as a nearer approach to physical reality, as a step toward realizing fundamental unities and codifying general principles, and as a door to new experimental opportunities.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Actins
Biochemical phenomena
Biochemistry
Biology
Blood
Epistemology. Philosophy of science. Theory of knowledge
Heart
Legal entities
Molecules
Muscle contraction
Philosophy
Reductionism
title Reduction, Explanation, and the Quests of Biological Research
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