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Biology and the systems view
Author(s) -
von Wülfingen Bettina Bock
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
embo reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.584
H-Index - 184
eISSN - 1469-3178
pISSN - 1469-221X
DOI - 10.1038/embor.2009.124
Subject(s) - reductionism , epistemology , sociology , philosophy
For many people, the advent of systems biology seems to herald a new era of research that might finally usurp the traditional, reductionist approach that has sought to understand living beings through the study of their constituent parts. The systems approach, according to this stance, is a new way both to investigate the ‘machine of life’ and, at the same time, to appreciate the uniqueness of living organisms: the unforeseeable behaviour of the whole owing to so-called emergent phenomena (Gilbert & Sarkar, 2000; Noble, 2008). Although systems biology is a rapidly growing field (Calvert, 2008), the question remains as to whether it represents a general trend in the life sciences, as theoreticians of biology diagnosed that it would be years ago (Sarkar, 2005; Keller 2005), or whether it is a less wide-reaching phenomenon. Here, I present and discuss findings from an analysis of publications in reproductive genetics that could help to resolve this question. These findings indicate that although several individual articles from this field embrace systems approaches in a broad sense, most publications actually deal with relatively simple models of cause–effect relationships. The study also revealed that the complexity of models correlates with the types of technique and equipment used in the laboratory.