What do biologists want? If, unlike their counterparts in physics, biologists are generally wary of a grand, overarching theory, at what kinds of explanation do biologists aim? How will we know when we have "made sense" of life? Such questions, Evelyn Fox Keller suggests, offer no simple answers. Explanations in the biological sciences are typically provisional and partial, judged by criteria as heterogeneous as their subject matter. It is Keller's aim in this bold and challenging book to account for this epistemological diversity—particularly in the discipline of developmental biology. In particular, Keller asks, what counts as an "explanation" of biological development in individual organisms? Her inquiry ranges from physical and mathematical models to more familiar explanatory metaphors to the dramatic contributions of recent technological developments, especially in imaging, recombinant DNA, and computer modeling and simulations. A history of the diverse and changing nature of biological explanation in a particularly charged field, Making Sense of Life draws our attention to the temporal, disciplinary, and cultural components of what biologists mean, and what they understand, when they propose to explain life.
Author(s): Evelyn Fox Keller
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Year: 2003
Language: English
Pages: 400
Contents......Page 6
Preface......Page 8
Introduction......Page 14
Part I. Models: Explaining Development with the Help of Genes......Page 24
1. Synthetic Biology and the Origin of Living Form......Page 28
2. Morphology as a Science of Mechanical Forces......Page 63
3. Untimely Births of a Mathematical Biology......Page 92
Part II. Metaphors: Genes and Developmental Narratives......Page 126
4. Genes, Gene Action, and Genetic Programs......Page 136
5. Taming the Cybernetic Metaphor......Page 161
6. Positioning Positional Information......Page 186
Part III. Machines: Understanding Development with Computers, Recombinant DNA, and Molecular Imaging
......Page 212
7. The Visual Culture of Molecular Embryology......Page 218
8. New Roles for Mathematical and Computational Modeling......Page 247
9. Synthetic Biology Redux—Computer Simulation and Artificial Life......Page 278
Conclusion: Understanding Development......Page 308
Notes......Page 318
References......Page 364
Index
......Page 395