
Descartes held that non-human animals could be reductively explained as automata — ''De homines 1622''.
In
philosophy, 'reductionism' is a theory that asserts that the nature of complex things is
reduced to the nature of sums of simpler or more fundamental things. This can be said of
objects,
phenomena,
explanations,
theories, and
meanings.
Reductionism is often understood to
imply the unity of science. For example, fundamental
chemistry is based on
physics, fundamental
biology and
geology are based on
chemistry,
psychology is based on
biology,
sociology is based on
psychology, and
political science,
anthropology, and even
economics are based on
sociology. The first two of these reductions are commonly accepted but the last three or four — psychology to biology and so on — are controversial. For example, aspects of
evolutionary psychology and
sociobiology are rejected by those who claim that complex systems are inherently irreducible or
holistic. Some strong reductionists believe that the behavioral sciences should become "genuine" scientific disciplines by being based on genetic biology, and on the systematic study of culture (cf. Dawkins's concept of
memes).
In his book ''
The Blind Watchmaker'',
Richard Dawkins introduced the term "hierarchical reductionism" (p. 13) to describe the view that complex systems can be described with a hierarchy of organizations, each of which can only be described in terms of objects one level down in the hierarchy. He provides the example of a computer, which under hierarchical reductionism can be explained well in terms of the operation of hard drives, processors, and memory, but not on the level of
AND or NOR gates, or on the even lower level of electrons in a semiconductor medium.
Varieties of reductionism
There are several generally accepted types or forms of reduction in both science and philosophy:
Ontological reductionism
Main articles: Ontological reductionism
Ontological reduction is the idea that everything that exists is made from a small number of basic substances that behave in regular ways (''compare to
monism''). There are two forms of ontological reductionism: token ontological reductionism, and type ontological reductionism.
Token ontological reductionism is the idea that every item that exists is a sum item. For perceivable items, it says that every perceivable item is a sum of items at a smaller level of complexity.
Type ontological reductionism is the idea that every type of item is a sum (of typically less complex) type(s) of item(s). For perceivable types of item, it says that every perceivable type of item is a sum of types of items at a lower level of complexity. Token ontological reduction of biological things to chemical things is generally accepted. Type ontological reduction of biological things to chemical things is often rejected.
Methodological reductionism
Main articles: Methodological reductionism
Methodological reductionism is the idea that developing an understanding of a complex system's constituent parts (and their interactions) is the best way to develop an understanding of the system as a whole.
[ Phisics Holism, Stanford University.]
Methodological individualism
Main articles: Methodological individualism
Methodological individualism protends
sociological inquiry based on individual decisions.
Theoretical reductionism
Theoretical reductionism has two definitions. In the first definition it is the idea that the terms of a theory of science A referring to objects at a higher level of complexity than the objects of science B can be replaced by the terms of science B. In the second definition of
theoretical reductionism the older theories or explanations are not generally replaced outright by new ones, but new theories are refinements or reductions of the old theory into more efficacious forms with greater detail and explanatory power. The older theories are supposedly ''absorbed'' into the newer ones and they can be deductively derived from the latter.
Scientific reductionism
Main articles: Scientific reductionism
Scientific reductionism has been used to describe all of the above ideas as they relate to science, but is most often used to describe the idea that all phenomena can be reduced by scientific explanations. It is useful to note in addition that there are no explicit theories that reject token ontological reduction of biological items to chemical items, or that reject token ontological reduction of chemical items to physics items. Also by the middle of the 20th century the empirical results made extremely implausible the view that there are fundamental forces activated only by highly complex configurations of subatomic particles.
Linguistic reductionism
Linguistic reductionism is the idea that everything can be described in a language with a limited number of core concepts, and combinations of those concepts. (See
Basic English and the constructed language
Toki Pona).
Greedy reductionism
Main articles: Greedy reductionism
Greedy reductionism is a term coined by
Daniel Dennett to condemn those forms of reductionism that try to explain too much with too little.
Eliminativism
Main articles: Eliminativism
Eliminativism is sometimes regarded as a form of reductionism.
Eliminativism is the idea that some objects referred to in a given theory do not exist. Accordingly, the terms of that theory are abandoned or eliminated.
Eliminativism is often regarded as a form of reductionism, since the eliminated theory is at some point replaced by a theory referring to the objects that were not eliminated. For example, the theory that some diseases are caused by occupation by a demon has been eliminated. Accordingly it has been reduced by elimination to other theories about the causes of diseases.
Other typologies are also possible. For example, Richard Jones in a systematic study of reductionism in philosophy, the natural sciences, the social sciences and religion differentiates five types: substantive, structural (causal), theoretical, conceptual (descriptive), and methodological. He critiicizes reductionism and advocates the importance of emergence. John Dupre also advocates antireductionism.
Denials of Reductionism
A denial of reductionist ideas is
holism or
emergentism: the idea that things can have properties as a whole that are not explainable from the sum of their parts. The principle of holism was concisely summarized by Aristotle in the Metaphysics: "The whole is more than the sum of its parts". Phenomena such as
emergence and work within the field of
complex systems theory are also considered to be
objections to some forms of reductionism.
Outside the field of strictly philosophical discourse, the best known denial of reductionism is
religious belief, which, in most of its forms, assigns supernatural original causes to phenomena. In this approach, even if a given system operates by strictly reductionistic causes and effects, its "true" genesis and placement within larger (and typically unknown) systems is bound up with an intelligence or "consciousness" that is beyond normal or uninvited human perception.
History
The idea of reductionism was introduced by
Descartes in Part V of his ''Discourses'' (1637). Descartes argued the world was like a machine, its pieces like clockwork mechanisms, and that the machine could be understood by taking its pieces apart, studying them, and then putting them back together to see the larger picture. Descartes was a full
mechanist, but only because he did not accept the conservation of direction of motions of small things in a machine, including an organic machine. Newton's theory required such conservation for inorganic things at least. When such conservation was accepted for organisms as well as inorganic objects by the middle of the 20th century, no organic mechanism could easily, if at all, be a Cartesian mechanism.
See also
★
Holism
★
Emergentism
★
Scientific reductionism
★
Theology
★
Aristotle
★
Philosophy of Mind
★
Physicalism
★
Systems theory
References
★ Dawkins, R. (1976) ''The Selfish Gene''. Oxford University Press; 2nd edition, December 1989 ISBN 0-19-217773-7.
★ Descartes (1637) Discourses Part V
★ Dupre, J. (1993) ''The Disorder of Things''. Harvard University Press.
★ Jones, R. (2000) ''Reductionism: Analysis and the Fullness of Reality''. Bucknell University Press.
★ Nagel, E. (1961) ''The Structure of Science''. New York.
★ Ruse, M. (1988) ''Philosophy of Biology''. Albany, NY.
★ Dennett, Daniel. (1995) ''Darwin's Dangerous Idea''. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-82471-X.
★
Alexander Rosenberg (2006) ''Darwinian Reductionism or How to Stop Worrying and Love Molecular Biology''. University of Chicago Press.
External links
★
John Dupré: The Disunity of Science, an interview at the Galilean Library covering criticisms of reductionism.