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Structural Realism in Biology: A (Sympathetic) Critique
Structural Realism in Biology: A (Sympathetic) Critique

Author(s): Sahotra Sarkar
Subject(s): Contemporary Philosophy, Philosophy of Science
Published by: KruZak
Keywords: Biology; emergentism; empiricism; holism; instrumentalism; reductionism; scientific realism; structural realism;

Summary/Abstract: Structural realism holds that ontological commitments induced by successful scientific theories should focus on the structures rather than the objects posited by the theories. Thus structural realism goes beyond the empirical adequacy criterion of traditional (or constructive) empiricism. It also attempts to avoid the problems scientific realism faces in contexts of radical theory change accompanied by discordant shifts in posited theoretical objects. Structural realism emerged in the context of attempts to interpret developments in twentieth-century physics. In a biological context, Stanford (2006) provided pre-emptive criticism. French (2011, 2012) has since attempted to answer those criticisms and extend structural realism to the biological realm. This paper argues that, though Stanford’s criticism may be misplaced, and structural realism fares much better than traditional scientific realism in biological contexts, it remains a promissory note. The promise is based on shifting the focus of the debate from the status of biological laws to that of biological organization, an issue that remains a live debate within biology.

  • Issue Year: XX/2020
  • Issue No: 58
  • Page Range: 35-62
  • Page Count: 28
  • Language: English
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