It is a widespread assumption in philosophy of science that representations of data are not explanatory—that they are mere stepping stones towards an explanation, such as a representation of a mechanism. I draw on instances of representational and explanatory practice from mammalian chronobiology to suggest that this assumption is unsustainable. In many instances, biologists employ representations of data in explanatory ways that are not reducible to constraints on or evidence for representations of mechanisms. Data graphs are used to represent relationships between quantities across conditions, and often these representations are necessary for explaining particular aspects of the phenomena under study. The benefit of the analysis is two-fold. First, it provides a more accurate account of explanatory practice in broadly mechanistic investigation in biology. Second, it suggests that there is not an explanatorily “fundamental” type of representation in biology. Rather, the practice of explanation consists in the construction of different types of representations and their employment for distinct explanatory purposes.
...More
Article
Bechtel, William;
Abrahamsen, Adele;
(2005)
Explanation: A Mechanist Alternative
(/isis/citation/CBB000770697/)
Article
Benjamin Sheredos;
(2017)
Communicating with scientific graphics: A descriptive inquiry into non-ideal normativity
(/isis/citation/CBB842247874/)
Book
Pierre-Alain Braillard;
Christophe Malaterre;
(2015)
Explanation in Biology: An Enquiry into the Diversity of Explanatory Patterns in the Life Sciences
(/isis/citation/CBB328513685/)
Article
Karina Alleva;
José Díez;
Lucia Federico;
(2017)
Models, theory structure and mechanisms in biochemistry: The case of allosterism
(/isis/citation/CBB541545262/)
Article
Lauren N. Ross;
(2021)
Causal Concepts in Biology: How Pathways Differ from Mechanisms and Why It Matters
(/isis/citation/CBB579689608/)
Article
Loison, Laurent;
(2011)
French Roots of French Neo-Lamarckisms, 1879--1985
(/isis/citation/CBB001220959/)
Article
(2000)
Toward a New Understanding of Scientific Success
(/isis/citation/CBB000110609/)
Article
Kleiner, Scott A.;
(2003)
Explanatory Coherence and Empirical Adequacy: The Problem of Abduction, and the Justification of Evolutionary Models
(/isis/citation/CBB000340587/)
Article
Jessica Carter;
(2018)
Graph-algebras—Faithful representations and mediating objects in mathematics
(/isis/citation/CBB329983095/)
Article
R. Lee Lyman;
(2019)
Misunderstanding graphs: The confusion of biological clade diversity diagrams and archaeological frequency seriation diagrams
(/isis/citation/CBB729212970/)
Article
Mary S. Morgan;
(2020)
Inducing Visibility and Visual Deduction
(/isis/citation/CBB269777379/)
Article
Raphael Scholl;
(2016)
Spot the difference: Causal contrasts in scientific diagrams
(/isis/citation/CBB979252699/)
Article
William Bechtel;
(2015)
Can mechanistic explanation be reconciled with scale-free constitution and dynamics?
(/isis/citation/CBB113792331/)
Article
Darden, Lindley;
(2005)
Relations among Fields: Mendelian, Cytological and Molecular Mechanisms
(/isis/citation/CBB000770694/)
Article
Zammito, John H.;
(2012)
The Lenoir Thesis Revisited: Blumenbach and Kant
(/isis/citation/CBB001221595/)
Article
Brink-Roby, Heather;
(2009)
Natural Representation: Diagram and Text in Darwin's On the Origin of Species
(/isis/citation/CBB001030093/)
Article
Moss, Lenny;
Nicholson, Daniel J.;
(2012)
On Nature and Normativity: Normativity, Teleology, and Mechanism in Biological Explanation
(/isis/citation/CBB001221591/)
Article
Bechtel, William;
(2010)
The Cell: Locus or Object of Inquiry?
(/isis/citation/CBB001023957/)
Thesis
Meynell, Letitia Mercia;
(2004)
Representing, Imagining and Understanding: The Aesthetics and Epistemology of Images in Science
(/isis/citation/CBB001561840/)
Chapter
Schummer, Joachim;
(2003)
Chemical versus Biological Explanations: Interdisciplinarity and Reductionism in 19th Century Life Sciences
(/isis/citation/CBB000600079/)
Be the first to comment!