“A Delicate Equilibrium of the Most Complex Sort”

IF 0.7 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1525/hsns.2023.53.2.147
Thomas M. Lekan
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Abstract

This article examines the intertidal ecological research of the commercial lab owner and popular science writer Edward F. Ricketts, best known as the prototype for John Steinbeck’s character “Doc” in the novel Cannery Row (1945). Ricketts’s friendship with Steinbeck and unconventional philosophical style have regrettably overshadowed his scientific work, particularly his novel faunal zonation surveys of the North American Pacific littoral in the 1930s and 1940s. These surveys resulted in a landmark handbook, Between Pacific Tides (1939), designed for novices and specialists alike. Ricketts’s work demonstrates how the place of ecological investigation (Billick and Price)—here Monterey Bay’s pounding surf, storm-tossed debris, eclectic bohemianism, and the collaborative energies at Hopkins Marine Station—“imprinted” West Coast animal ecology. At first, Ricketts adopted the physiological methods and conceptions of ecological holism he had learned at the University of Chicago under mentor Warder C. Allee in the early 1920s. Allee had conducted his investigations of intertidal organisms in the relatively placid bays and estuaries at the Woods Hole research center on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Allee envisioned animal aggregations as higher-order societies guided by “unconscious cooperation” and evolving toward a climax state. Yet Ricketts found that physiochemical factors, such as temperature and salinity, could not explain the distribution of organisms amid the Pacific’s far more precarious rough-and-tumble surf, nor could they account for fierce competition among organisms. Rejecting Allee’s cooperative metaphors, Ricketts came to see community structure as an unintended result of tidepool invertebrates’ Darwinian struggle to occupy resource niches—a “set of sieves” that transferred nourishment from one part of the aggregation to the next, binding it together in interlocking food webs. Through dialogue with Steinbeck about the implications of modern physics during their Sea of Cortez voyage (1940), Ricketts developed a “unified field hypothesis” to conceptualize the dynamic interwovenness created by transfers of metabolic energy. Yet Steinbeck ultimately held fast to a super-organismic understanding of ecological holism—a hierarchical relationship between constituents and the whole that underlays the novelist’s idea of the human “phalanx” in Grapes of Wrath and other works. The article offers new insights about the ecological origins of Steinbeck and Ricketts’s disputes over “non-teleological” reasoning and the pair’s divergent understandings of nature, society, and progressive politics.
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“最复杂的微妙平衡”
本文考察了商业实验室老板、科普作家爱德华·f·里基茨(Edward F. Ricketts)的潮间带生态研究,他因约翰·斯坦贝克(John Steinbeck)小说《罐头厂街》(Cannery Row, 1945)中角色“博士”(Doc)的原型而闻名。令人遗憾的是,里基茨与斯坦贝克的友谊和非传统的哲学风格掩盖了他的科学工作,特别是他在20世纪30年代和40年代对北美太平洋沿岸进行的新颖的动物分区调查。这些调查产生了一本具有里程碑意义的手册,《太平洋潮汐之间》(1939),专为新手和专家设计。里基茨的作品展示了生态调查的地点(比利克和普莱斯)——这里的蒙特利湾汹涌的海浪、风暴肆虐的残骸、不拘不躁的波西米亚风格,以及霍普金斯海洋站的合作精神——如何“烙印”了西海岸的动物生态。起初,里基茨采用了他20世纪20年代初在芝加哥大学师从导师沃德·c·阿利(Warder C. Allee)学到的生理学方法和生态整体论的概念。Allee在马萨诸塞州科德角的伍兹霍尔研究中心对相对平静的海湾和河口的潮间带生物进行了调查。Allee将动物群体设想为由“无意识合作”引导的高级社会,并向高潮状态进化。然而,里基茨发现,物理化学因素,如温度和盐度,不能解释生物在太平洋更不稳定的汹涌海浪中的分布,也不能解释生物之间激烈的竞争。里基茨拒绝了阿利的合作隐喻,他认为群落结构是潮池无脊椎动物争夺资源利基的达尔文式斗争的意外结果——“一套筛子”将营养从聚集体的一个部分转移到另一个部分,将它们结合在一起形成连锁的食物网。在1940年的科尔特斯之海航行中,里基茨与斯坦贝克就现代物理学的含义进行了对话,他提出了一个“统一场假说”,将代谢能量转移所产生的动态相互交织概念化。然而,斯坦贝克最终坚持了对生态整体的超有机体理解——在《愤怒的葡萄》和其他作品中,组成部分与整体之间的等级关系奠定了小说家关于人类“方阵”的想法。这篇文章为斯坦贝克和里基茨关于“非目的论”推理的争论以及两人对自然、社会和进步政治的不同理解的生态起源提供了新的见解。
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来源期刊
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 社会科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Explore the fascinating world of Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, a journal that reveals the history of science as it has developed since the 18th century. HSNS offers in-depth articles on a wide range of scientific fields, their social and cultural histories and supporting institutions, including astronomy, geology, physics, genetics, natural history, chemistry, meteorology, and molecular biology. Widely regarded as a leading journal in the historiography of science and technology, HSNS increased its publication to five times per year in 2012 to expand its roster of pioneering articles and notable reviews by the most influential writers in the field.
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