The units of life : kinds of individual in biology /

In 'The Units of Life', Ellen Clarke argues that our way of conceptualizing living things - of understanding the living world as carved up into numerous separate chunks - is best understood as idealization. This idealization serves valuable pragmatic and theoretical purposes, but stands as...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clarke, Ellen (Of University of Leeds) (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Oxford ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2025]
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Description
Summary:In 'The Units of Life', Ellen Clarke argues that our way of conceptualizing living things - of understanding the living world as carved up into numerous separate chunks - is best understood as idealization. This idealization serves valuable pragmatic and theoretical purposes, but stands as a distortion nonetheless of the more messy and variable reality.
Abstract:"This book addresses a concept—that of the organism, or biological individual—which is used across biology to pick out living things, but which is contested. I argue that we can arbitrate arguments about the concept by delving into philosophical questions about what concepts are for, in order to formulate some plausible success criteria against which the performance of rival concepts can be evaluated. I defend a particular, evolutionary way of understanding the concept as outperforming its rivals in terms of the kind and range of work it supports. More generally, I argue that kind concepts are like scientific models, in that they distort and idealise the natural world for the sake of making it easier for us to think, talk, and entertain useful expectations about that world. This means that we need to be cautious when trafficking between biological concepts and more abstract metaphysical assumptions about objecthood. But it also helps to explain how our common-sense practice of parsing the living world into countable chunks delivers rich predictive and explanatory success, even though that world is in a bewildering state of transition and compositional complexity. The book delivers creative insights for evolutionary biology and transitions theory, but also breaks new ground in the way it connects scientific ontology to metaphysics"-- Oxford Academic.
Physical Description:1 online resource : illustrations (chiefly color)
Audience:Specialized.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780191948008
0191948004
9780192671455
0192671456
9780192671462
0192671464