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Excessive reductionism in Biology? |
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| Jul30-04, 02:34 PM | #1 |
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Excessive reductionism in Biology?
One of keys in the development of the modern Biology, exemplified by the advances in Genetics was due to a reductionist view.
Nevertheless it is possible that an excess of reductionism have side effects. So, face to Biochemistry, less work was done in Biophysics (reflected in databases as PubMed), excepting some fields such as the biological effects of ionizing radiations. Likewise, besides a lot of work in Genetics/Genomics and, more recently, Proteomics, less research is being conducted on the physical properties of the cell. There are interesting perspectives, such as the complex systems theories, centered on the so called emergent properties. But I believe that an excess of reductionism can blind many interesting fields of basic and applied research. |
| Jul30-04, 03:17 PM | #2 |
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I do think there has been a bit too much focus on molecular biology. It seems almost every bio-student I know is going for molecular-bio. I know the field is really hot in the wake of the Human Genome Project, but it's going to eventually reach saturation in terms of employed researchers and other disciplines are being neglected. Take entomology, for instance. I doubt many people here realize that many of the best paid biologists in the US are entomologists, simply because they are so rare and are very important to agriculture.
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| Jul30-04, 07:09 PM | #3 |
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I agree as well. I use some molecular approaches, but keep my feet solidly grounded in systems. I run into too many molecular biologists who will stare at me blankly when I ask something like, "but what does it do in the animal?" The old adage "can't see the forest for the trees" comes to mind. I think both approaches are good, but at some point you have to meet in the middle to make either useful.
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| Jul30-04, 07:56 PM | #4 |
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Excessive reductionism in Biology?
Carl Woese started a similar discussion with a paper. I try to start the same topic. I still trying to work some notes out the paper.
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=34411 |
| Jul30-04, 08:54 PM | #5 |
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Is that what that paper was about? I recall being tired the night I read it, but also remember it not making a lot of sense the way it was written. The two may have been related (my tiredness and inability to make sense of the article).
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| Jul30-04, 09:04 PM | #6 |
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The paper is in part about the redutionism of molecular biology and it effect biology, and it is also an autobiography. Sometimes it get confusing and he review some of previous paper which I have read and I skip ahead for these part.
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| Jul31-04, 04:51 AM | #7 |
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| Jul31-04, 05:22 AM | #8 |
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Whereas in other cases - take cancer, for instance - we tried it that way and saw that it doesn't work this simply. So what we do is do soem more research, put together more pieces of the puzzle, gain an ever better understanding of the thing - and at some point in the future, we will have figured it out enough to take our knowledge and our improved methods and develop a cure for it. We're still *very* far away from knowing enough about the molecular interactions at the base of life and having methods that are precise enough in order to explain complex systemic phenomena in a synthetic manner, drawing upon the molecular parts. But that doesnt mean this approach is not viable; on the contrary, the fact that we still have so much work to do is an argument for focussing quite a bit of efforts on molecular biology. Having said that, it is certainly true that because of the genetics hype, a large number of students just go into the field because it's "hot", and there surely are more aspects of biology that are very interesting as well. Or am I mistaken? |
| Jul31-04, 12:43 PM | #9 |
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As you write, "we still have so much work to do". I agree. But I think that there is an excess of reductionism. For example: a) In the importance done to the gene expression in "structural" terms: sequencing and differential expression (tissue or pathology - related) face to a more scarce interest on non-codifying DNA and the environmental influences and dynamic variations. What about junk DNA? b) A relative scant research on Biophysics. The influence of temperature on cells is only marginally studied (heat shock proteins). As a little example, I think it is very curious the so called reaction norms of phenotypic traits, as that seen in Drosophila. c) The relative paralysis of research in other traditional biological fields I believe that now everything is being "reduced" to DNA. |
| Jul31-04, 01:34 PM | #10 |
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So, in short, I absolutely agree. Alas, maybe I have no room to talk, since I am one of those students who are beginning their studies with a focus on molecular bio these days myself...
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| Jul31-04, 06:34 PM | #11 |
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Do you suggest another, more useful, term? |
| Jul31-04, 06:55 PM | #12 |
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| Aug26-04, 12:19 PM | #13 |
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The actual reductionist view in Mol Biol can partially result from the consideration of DNA as the support of genetic code. Of course that is true. But the great advances that this discovery made possible have difficulted the wide view of the use of other languages by DNA.
Languages of direct communication both with proteins (with a regulator or structural role) and even DNA ("communication" among regions with transposons). From junk DNA we have already discussed in this forum. |
| Sep2-04, 06:50 AM | #14 |
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One possible consequence of the reductionist viewpoint is the scarcity of work devoted to the study of comparative biochemistry and physiology.
Nevertheless, a lot of knowledge could derive from such studies. For example, from differences in resistance to diseases among different animals, or studying why some plants make medicinal drugs. |
| Sep2-04, 10:58 AM | #15 |
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| Sep3-04, 05:26 PM | #16 |
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Yes. The change in hot topics is clear.
But, what moves hot topics? Only scientific interest? I think that Molecular Biology is directed in great measure by Pharmaceutical Industry. |
| Oct28-04, 04:57 PM | #17 |
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A question on reductionism would be: is it ever possible?
Such would be the case with quorum sensing in bacteria. The behavior of a group of bacteria, both in vivo (biofilms) or in vitro (colonies on agar) seems to be very most complicated than a sum of individual actions. For this example an other similar cases, my question would be: Are there fundamental limits to a reductionist viewpoint in Biology ? |
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