98th ESA Annual Meeting (August 4 -- 9, 2013)

IGN 14 - The Value of Philosophy for Ecology

Thursday, August 8, 2013: 8:00 AM-10:00 AM
101E, Minneapolis Convention Center
Organizer:
Chelse M. Prather
Co-organizer:
Thomas E. Miller
Moderator:
Thomas E. Miller
Although the natural sciences, including ecology, once arose from philosophy, the two disciplines have become very disjointed in the last century. At times, ecologists and philosophers alike have both called for a greater philosophical understanding in ecology to answer certain types of questions and recently, philosophers have argued that progress in ecology would be enhanced by explicitly recognizing and utilizing its philosophical basis. Some philosophers’ work has even managed to penetrate ecological dialog: e.g., Kuhn’s paradigm shifts and Popper’s falsification. However, many ecologists seem resistant to these pleas for a philosophical understanding of the field, and many scientists in general think philosophy is not useful to practicing science (e.g., “Philosophy of science is about as useful to scientists as ornithology is to birds”, attributed to Richard Feynman). We are interested in better understanding if, how, and why ecologists employ philosophy in their practice of science. Is there philosophy of value to the practicing ecologist? Do most ecologists see some role for philosophy of science, or some other type of philosophy? Here, we bring together ecologists from different sub-disciplines at a range of points in their career to give their answer this question, using examples from their work, or other prominent ecological examples of successes or failures of employing philosophy or philosophical tools in ecology.
Why and how to put the Ph back into the ecology PhD
Chelse M. Prather, University of Houston
Traffic safety at the intersection of ethics and epistemology
Stephen T. Jackson, U.S. Geological Survey
Ecology, Environmentalism, and Science
Donald R. Strong, University of California, Davis
From natural history to solution science – Thinking of our discipline as a right of passage
Joshua J. Tewksbury, Future Earth; Carlos Martinez del Rio, University of Wyoming
Connecting philosophy, and philosophers, to ecological research
Michael P. Nelson, Oregon State University; Joseph K. Bump, Michigan Technological University; John A. Vucetich, Michigan Technological University
Blind ecologists and the ecological elephant
William A. Reiners, University of Wyoming; Jeffrey A. Lockwood, University of Wyoming
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