"Batesonian Mendelism" and "Pearsonian biometry": shedding new light on the controversy between William Bateson and Karl Pearson.

IF 1.6 3区 哲学 Q1 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences Pub Date : 2022-10-21 DOI:10.1007/s40656-022-00528-5
Nicola Bertoldi
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Abstract

This paper contributes to the ongoing reassessment of the controversy between William Bateson and Karl Pearson by characterising what we call "Batesonian Mendelism" and "Pearsonian biometry" as coherent and competing scientific outlooks. Contrary to the thesis that such a controversy stemmed from diverging theoretical commitments on the nature of heredity and evolution, we argue that Pearson's and Bateson's alternative views on those processes ultimately relied on different appraisals of the methodological value of the statistical apparatus developed by Francis Galton. Accordingly, we contend that Bateson's belief in the primacy of cross-breeding experiments over statistical analysis constituted a minimal methodological unifying condition ensuring the internal coherence of Batesonian Mendelism. Moreover, this same belief implied a view of the study of heredity and evolution as an experimental endeavour and a conception of heredity and evolution as fundamentally discontinuous processes. Similarly, we identify a minimal methodological unifying condition for Pearsonian biometry, which we characterise as the view that experimental methods had to be subordinate to statistical analysis, according to methodological standards set by biometrical research. This other methodological commitment entailed conceiving the study of heredity and evolution as subsumable under biometry and primed Pearson to regard discontinuous hereditary and evolutionary processes as exceptions to a statistical norm. Finally, we conclude that Batesonian Mendelism and Pearsonian biometry represented two potential versions of a single genetics-based evolutionary synthesis since the methodological principles and the phenomena that played a central role in the former were also acknowledged by the latter-albeit as fringe cases-and conversely.

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“贝特森的孟德尔主义”与“皮尔逊的生物计量学”:对威廉·贝特森与卡尔·皮尔逊之争的新认识。
本文通过描述我们称之为“贝特森式孟德尔主义”和“皮尔逊式生物计量学”的连贯而相互竞争的科学观点,有助于重新评估威廉·贝特森和卡尔·皮尔逊之间的争议。与这种争论源于对遗传和进化本质的不同理论承诺的论点相反,我们认为,皮尔逊和贝特森对这些过程的不同观点最终取决于对弗朗西斯·高尔顿(Francis Galton)开发的统计工具的方法论价值的不同评价。因此,我们认为贝特森相信杂交实验比统计分析更重要,这构成了确保贝特森孟德尔主义内部一致性的最小方法论统一条件。此外,同样的信念暗示了遗传和进化研究是一种实验性努力的观点,以及遗传和进化是基本不连续过程的概念。同样,我们确定了皮尔逊生物计量学的最小方法统一条件,我们将其描述为实验方法必须服从于统计分析的观点,根据生物计量学研究制定的方法标准。这另一个方法论上的承诺包括将遗传和进化的研究纳入生物计量学,并使皮尔逊将不连续的遗传和进化过程视为统计规范的例外。最后,我们得出结论,贝特森的孟德尔主义和皮尔逊的生物计量学代表了单一遗传进化综合的两个潜在版本,因为在前者中起核心作用的方法论原则和现象也被后者所承认——尽管是边缘案例——反之亦然。
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来源期刊
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 综合性期刊-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
5.00%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences is an interdisciplinary journal committed to providing an integrative approach to understanding the life sciences. It welcomes submissions from historians, philosophers, biologists, physicians, ethicists and scholars in the social studies of science. Contributors are expected to offer broad and interdisciplinary perspectives on the development of biology, biomedicine and related fields, especially as these perspectives illuminate the foundations, development, and/or implications of scientific practices and related developments. Submissions which are collaborative and feature different disciplinary approaches are especially encouraged, as are submissions written by senior and junior scholars (including graduate students).
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