Integration of approaches in David Wake's model-taxon research platform for evolutionary morphology

Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci. 2013 Dec;44(4 Pt A):525-36. doi: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.03.021. Epub 2013 Apr 12.

Abstract

What gets integrated in integrative scientific practices has been a topic of much discussion. Traditional views focus on theories and explanations, with ideas of reduction and unification dominating the conversation. More recent ideas focus on disciplines, fields, or specialties; models, mechanisms, or methods; phenomena, problems. How integration works looks different on each of these views since the objects of integration are ontologically and epistemically various: statements, boundary conditions, practices, protocols, methods, variables, parameters, domains, laboratories, and questions all have their own structures, functions and logics. I focus on one particular kind of scientific practice, integration of "approaches" in the context of a research system operating on a special kind of "platform." Rather than trace a network of interactions among people, practices, and theoretical entities to be integrated, in this essay I focus on the work of a single investigator, David Wake. I describe Wake's practice of integrative evolutionary biology and how his integration of approaches among biological specialties worked in tandem with his development of the salamanders as a model taxon, which he used as a platform to solve, re-work and update problems that would not have been solved so well by non-integrative approaches. The larger goal of the project to which this paper contributes is a counter-narrative to the story of 20th century life sciences as the rise and march of the model organisms and decline of natural history.

Keywords: David B. Wake; Evolutionary morphology; Integration; Model taxon; Research system.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution*
  • Biology / history*
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • History, 20th Century
  • History, 21st Century
  • Models, Animal
  • Urodela / anatomy & histology*
  • Urodela / physiology*

Personal name as subject

  • David B Wake