Sterner Beckett, Lidgard Scott
Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, United States.
Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, United States.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci. 2014 Jun;46:44-54. doi: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.03.001. Epub 2014 Apr 6.
We argue that the mathematization of science should be understood as a normative activity of advocating for a particular methodology with its own criteria for evaluating good research. As a case study, we examine the mathematization of taxonomic classification in systematic biology. We show how mathematization is a normative activity by contrasting its distinctive features in numerical taxonomy in the 1960s with an earlier reform advocated by Ernst Mayr starting in the 1940s. Both Mayr and the numerical taxonomists sought to formalize the work of classification, but Mayr introduced a qualitative formalism based on human judgment for determining the taxonomic rank of populations, while the numerical taxonomists introduced a quantitative formalism based on automated procedures for computing classifications. The key contrast between Mayr and the numerical taxonomists is how they conceptualized the temporal structure of the workflow of classification, specifically where they allowed meta-level discourse about difficulties in producing the classification.
我们认为,科学的数学化应被理解为一种规范性活动,即倡导一种具有自身评估优秀研究标准的特定方法。作为一个案例研究,我们考察了系统生物学中分类学分类的数学化。通过将20世纪60年代数值分类学的独特特征与恩斯特·迈尔从20世纪40年代开始倡导的早期改革进行对比,我们展示了数学化是一种规范性活动。迈尔和数值分类学家都试图将分类工作形式化,但迈尔引入了一种基于人类判断的定性形式主义来确定种群的分类等级,而数值分类学家则引入了一种基于自动程序计算分类的定量形式主义。迈尔和数值分类学家之间的关键区别在于他们如何概念化分类工作流程的时间结构,特别是他们允许关于产生分类困难的元层次论述的位置。