What is Biology?

23
What is Biology?

description

What is Biology?. Levels of organization. Disciplines. How do we know things?. Perception. Our perception can be very different from reality - think of magicians The spell of the sensuous by David Abrams. Me ’ en Tribe of Ethiopia Picture recognition. Oral Culture Written culture. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What is Biology?

Page 1: What is  Biology?

What is Biology?

Page 2: What is  Biology?

Levels of organization

Page 3: What is  Biology?

Disciplines

Page 4: What is  Biology?

How do we know things?

Page 5: What is  Biology?

Perception

Our perception can be very different from reality- think of magicians

The spell of the sensuous by David Abrams

Page 6: What is  Biology?

Me’en Tribe of Ethiopia

Picture recognition

Page 7: What is  Biology?
Page 8: What is  Biology?
Page 9: What is  Biology?

Oral Culture

Written culture

Page 10: What is  Biology?

10

Hieroglyphics

Page 11: What is  Biology?

Cuniform writing - simplified about 1000 pictographs to 400 synpols

Page 12: What is  Biology?

Alphabet:

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

Page 13: What is  Biology?

World View

• Frame of reference• Explains how and why• Usually unquestioned

Page 14: What is  Biology?

Plato 427 – 347 BCAristotle 384 – 322 BC

• The real world was ideal and perfect

• The perceived world, observed through our senses, was imperfect

• Organisms perfectly adapted (no evolution)

• Scala naturae – ladder of increasing complexity

• Major influence on Europe – lasted for 2000 years

Page 15: What is  Biology?

Separation of mind from body

this led to a symbolic and abstract language

I control my body

I grow vegetables

I can manage nature

I has become a bodiless psyche

Page 16: What is  Biology?

J-C worldview• Answers to questions sought from people or

texts of authority (sound familiar?)

• By 1300’s Greek philosophy slowly filtered to the ‘west’translated from Greek to Arabic to Latin

• Gutenberg 1397-1468

• Black Death

• Universities and Museums

Page 17: What is  Biology?

Rise of the Mechanical World View

Page 18: What is  Biology?

• Turning point came in 1543

• Publication of Archimedes• Publication of De Revolutionibus Orbium

Coelestrium by Copernicus• Publication of De Humani Corporis

Fabrica by Vasalius

18

Page 19: What is  Biology?

Mechanical World View

- Francis Bacon – Novum Organum 1620• humans could and should liberate themselves from

the natural world • objective knowledge • concentrate on the HOW not the WHY

Page 20: What is  Biology?

Sir Francis Bacon1561-1626

• Western science• Philosophical system for investigating nature• Did not like deductive reasoning

- accept something as true and then deduce a consequence

• We see what we believe rather than believe what we see.

• Stressed induction – observation (data) and experimentation

Page 21: What is  Biology?

• René Descartes (1596-1650) math was the language for understanding the natural world

• Isaac Newton (1642-1727)mechanical motion, gravity

• John Locke (1632-1704)social role of the state was to promote the subjugation of nature, trickle down theory

• Adam Smith (1723-1790)economist “Wealth of Nations”, the Invisible Hand

Page 22: What is  Biology?

Science became the means for understanding the natural world.

Technology became the means for ‘controlling’ the natural world.

Page 23: What is  Biology?

Mechanical world viewMachine Analogy.

Parts make up wholes; understand the parts and we can understand the whole.

Separation of humans from the rest of nature.

We can manage the machine.