Baron Christian
Center for the Philosophy of Nature and Science Studies, University of Copenhagen, Blegdamsvej 17, 2100 , Copenhagen, Denmark,
J Hist Biol. 2011 Winter;44(4):745-80. doi: 10.1007/s10739-010-9248-2.
Using the Burgess Shale controversies as a case-study, this paper argues that controversies within different domains may interact as to create a situation of "com- plicated intricacies," where the practicing scientist has to navigate through a context of multiple thought collectives. To some extent each of these collectives has its own dynamic complete with fairly negotiated standards for investigation and explanation, theoretical background assumptions and certain peculiarities of practice. But the intellectual development in one of these collectives may "spill over" having far reaching consequences for the treatment of apparently independent epistemic problems that are subject of investigation in other thought collectives. For the practicing scientist it is necessary to take this complex web of interactions into account in order to be able to navigate in such a situation. So far most studies of academic science have had a tendency to treat the practicing scientist as members of a single (enclosed) thought collective that stands intellectually isolated from other similar entities unless the discipline was in a state of crisis of paradigmatic proportions. The richness and complexity of Burgess Shale debate shows that this encapsulated kind of analysis is not enough.
以布尔吉斯页岩生物群争议作为案例研究,本文认为不同领域内的争议可能相互作用,从而营造出一种“复杂纠结”的局面,在此情形下,从事科研工作的科学家必须在多个思想群体的背景中摸索前行。在某种程度上,这些群体中的每一个都有其自身的动态变化,包括经过充分协商的调查与解释标准、理论背景假设以及某些实践特性。但是,其中一个群体的知识发展可能会“外溢”,对其他思想群体所研究的明显独立的认知问题的处理产生深远影响。对于从事科研工作的科学家而言,有必要考虑到这种复杂的互动网络,以便在这种情况下顺利开展工作。到目前为止,大多数学术科学研究倾向于将从事科研工作的科学家视为单一(封闭)思想群体的成员,该群体在知识层面上与其他类似实体相互隔离,除非该学科处于范式层面的危机状态。布尔吉斯页岩生物群辩论的丰富性和复杂性表明,这种封闭式的分析是不够的。