Literature DB >> 20509236

Laboratories, museums, and the comparative perspective: Alan A. Boyden's quest for objectivity in serological taxonomy, 1924-1962.

Bruno J Strasser1.   

Abstract

The rise of experimentation and the decline of natural history constitute the historiographic backbone to most narratives about the history of the life sciences in the twentieth century. As I argue here, however, natural history practices, such as the collection adn comparison of data from numerous species, adn experimental practices have actually converged throughout the century, giving rise to a new hybrid research culture which is essential to the contemporary life sciences. Looking at some examples of researchers who studied experimentally the relationships between organisms offers a unique window into how the norms, values, and practices of natural history entered the laboratory and, conversely, how the norms, values, and practices of experimentation transformed natural history. this paper concentrates on a largely overlooked episode in the history of the life sciences: the development of Alan A. Boyden's serological taxonomy. In the United States, from the late 1920s to the early 1960s, he was the most prominent advocate of this experimental approach in natural history. His quest for an objective method to understand the relationships among species, his creation of a serological museum where he could apply his comparative perspective, and his continued negotiations between natural historical and experimental traditions, illustrate the rise of a new hybrid research culture in the twentieth century. It also helps us solve a historiographic puzzle, namely how biological diversity become so central in the experimental life sciences, i.e., in a tradition which we generally understand as having focused on a few model organisms, and which relegated the study of biodiversity to naturalists and their museums.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20509236     DOI: 10.1525/hsns.2010.40.2.149

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Stud Nat Sci            Impact factor:   1.162


  8 in total

1.  Collecting, comparing, and computing sequences: the making of Margaret O. Dayhoff's Atlas of Protein Sequence and Structure, 1954-1965.

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Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.326

2.  Practice and place in twentieth-century field biology: a comment.

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3.  The long and winding road of molecular data in phylogenetic analysis.

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Review 4.  Molecular Evolution in Historical Perspective.

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Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2016-12-02       Impact factor: 2.395

5.  Modernizing Natural History: Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology in Transition.

Authors:  Mary E Sunderland
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 1.326

6.  The Sparrow Question: Social and Scientific Accord in Britain, 1850-1900.

Authors:  Matthew Holmes
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2017-08       Impact factor: 1.326

7.  Patterns of Infection and Patterns of Evolution: How a Malaria Parasite Brought "Monkeys and Man" Closer Together in the 1960s.

Authors:  Rachel Mason Dentinger
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 1.326

8.  Higher and colder: The success and failure of boundaries in high altitude and Antarctic research stations.

Authors:  Vanessa Heggie
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2016-07-08       Impact factor: 3.885

  8 in total

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