Philosophical Perspectives on the Engineering Approach in Biology
Philosophical Perspectives on the Engineering Approach in Biology provides a philosophical examination of what has been called the most powerful metaphor in biology: The machine metaphor. The chapters collected in this volume discuss the idea that living systems can be understood through the lens of engineering methods and machine metaphors from both historical, theoretical, and practical perspectives.
In their contributions the authors examine questions about scientific explanation and methodology, the interrelationship between science and engineering, and the impact that the use of engineering metaphors in science may have for bioethics and science communication, such as the worry that its wide application reinforces public misconceptions of the nature of new biotechnology and biological life. The book also contains an introduction that describes the rise of the machine analogy and the many ways in which it plays a central role in fundamental debates about e.g. design, adaptation, and reductionism in the philosophy of biology.
The book will be useful as a core reading for professionals as well as graduate and undergraduate students in courses of philosophy of science and for life scientists taking courses in philosophy of science and bioethics.
Sune Holm is Associate Professor in Philosophy at the Department of Food and Resource Economics at the University of Copenhagen. His research mainly focuses on topics in ethics and philosophy of science relating to biology, biotechnology, and artificial intelligence.
Maria Serban is a lecturer in philosophy at University of East Anglia. She is a philosopher of science focusing on modelling practices in the life sciences.
History and Philosophy of Biology
Series Editor: Rasmus Grnfeldt Winther is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC).
This series explores significant developments in the life sciences from historical and philosophical perspectives. Historical episodes include Aristotelian biology, Greek and Islamic biology and medicine, Renaissance biology, natural history, Darwinian evolution, Nineteenth-century physiology and cell theory, Twentieth-century genetics, ecology, and systematics, and the biological theories and practices of non-Western perspectives. Philosophical topics include individuality, reductionism and holism, fitness, levels of selection, mechanism and teleology, and the nature-nurture debates, as well as explanation, confirmation, inference, experiment, scientific practice, and models and theories vis--vis the biological sciences.
Authors are also invited to inquire into the and of this series. How has, does, and will the history of biology impact philosophical understandings of life? How can philosophy help us analyze the historical contingency of, and structural constraints on, scientific knowledge about biological processes and systems? In probing the interweaving of history and philosophy of biology, scholarly investigation could usefully turn to values, power, and potential future uses and abuses of biological knowledge.
The scientific scope of the series includes evolutionary theory, environmental sciences, genomics, molecular biology, systems biology, biotechnology, biomedicine, race and ethnicity, and sex and gender. These areas of the biological sciences are not silos, and tracking their impact on other sciences such as psychology, economics, and sociology, and the behavioral and human sciences more generally, is also within the purview of this series.
Biological Identity
Perspectives from Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Biology
Edited by Anne Sophie Meincke and John Dupr
Philosophical Perspectives on the Engineering Approach in Biology
Living Machines?
Edited by Sune Holm and Maria Serban
For more information about this series, please visit: www.routledge.com/History-and-Philosophy-of-Biology/book-series/HAPB
Philosophical Perspectives on the Engineering Approach in Biology
Living Machines?
Edited by
Sune Holm and Maria Serban
First published 2021
by Routledge
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2021 selection and editorial matter, Sune Holm and Maria Serban; individual chapters, the contributors
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British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Holm, Sune, editor.
Title: Philosophical perspectives on the engineering approach in biology : Living machines? / edited by Sune Holm and Maria Serban.
Description: First edition. | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: History and philosophy of biology | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020005123 (print) | LCCN 2020005124 (ebook) | ISBN 9780815380788 (hardback) | ISBN 9781351212243 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: BiologyPhilosophy. | BioengineeringMoral and ethical aspects. | Bioethics.
Classification: LCC QH331 .P466 2020 (print) | LCC QH331 (ebook) | DDC 570.1dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020005123
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020005124
ISBN: 978-0-8153-8078-8 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-351-21224-3 (ebk)
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Visit the eResources: http://www.routledge.com/9780815380788
Contents
Louisa Holt, Sune Holm, and Maria Serban
PART 1
Theoretical issues
Jessica Riskin
Daniel J. Nicholson
Brett Calcott
William Bechtel
PART 2
Methodological issues
Arnon Levy and William Bechtel
Tarja Knuuttila and Andrea Loettgers
Maria Serban and Sara Green
PART 3
Societal issues
Andreas T. Christiansen
Sune Holm
Guide
William Bechtel, Department of Philosophy, University of California, San Diego.