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(2013) Synthese 190 (18).

Reducing the dauer larva

molecular models of biological phenomena in caenorhabditis elegans research

Michal Arciszewski

pp. 4155-4179

One important aspect of biological explanation is detailed causal modeling of particular phenomena in limited experimental background conditions. Recognising this allows one to appreciate that a sufficient condition for a reduction in biology is a molecular model of (1) only the demonstrated causal parameters of a biological model and (2) only within a replicable experimental background. These identities—which are ubiquitous in biology and form the basis of ruthless reductions (Bickle, Philosophy and neuroscience: a ruthlessly reductive account, 2003)—are criticised as merely “local” (Sullivan, Synthese 167:511–539, 2009) or “fragmentary” (Schaffner, Synthese, 151(3):377–402, 2006). However, in an instructive case, a biological model is preserved in molecular terms, demonstrating a complex phenomenon that has been successfully reduced.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-013-0254-8

Full citation:

Arciszewski, M. (2013). Reducing the dauer larva: molecular models of biological phenomena in caenorhabditis elegans research. Synthese 190 (18), pp. 4155-4179.

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