The algorithmic turn in conservation biology: Characterizing progress in ethically-driven sciences |
| |
Authors: | James Justus Samantha Wakil |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Florida State University, USA;2. University of Nevada at Las Vegas, USA;1. Department of Philosophy, University of Haifa, Haifa, 31905, Israel;2. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() As a discipline distinct from ecology, conservation biology emerged in the 1980s as a rigorous science focused on protecting biodiversity. Two algorithmic breakthroughs in information processing made this possible: place-prioritization algorithms and geographical information systems. They provided defensible, data-driven methods for designing reserves to conserve biodiversity that obviated the need for largely intuitive and highly problematic appeals to ecological theory at the time. But the scientific basis of these achievements and whether they constitute genuine scientific progress has been criticized. We counter by pointing out important inaccuracies about the science and rejecting the apparent theory-first focus. More broadly, the case study reveals significant limitations of the predominant epistemic-semantic conceptions of scientific progress and the considerable merits of pragmatic, practically-oriented accounts. |
| |
Keywords: | Scientific progress Values in science Conservation biology Biodiversity Ecology Endangered species act Island biogeography Nature reserve Place-prioritization algorithm SLOSS |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|