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The "Altenberg Workshops in Theoretical Biology" address key questions of biological theories. Each workshop is organized by leading experts of a certain field who invite a group of international specialists to the KLI. The Altenberg Workshops aim to make conceptual progress and to generate initiatives of a distinctly interdisciplinary nature. 

Event Details

Gregory Radick
KLI Colloquia
Genetic Determinism Is an Accident of History
Gregory RADICK (University of Leeds)
2025-06-12 15:00 - 2025-06-12 16:30
KLI
Organized by KLI

Topic description / abstract:

This talk will present the case against regarding genetic determinism as historically inevitable because cognitively and socially inescapable.  The first, shorter part of the talk will critically evaluate four versions of the claim for inescapability: (1) we’re born with a bias towards deterministic thinking about inheritance; (2) we live in a culture riddled with genohype and can’t help but absorb it; (3) we struggle with the idea that effects can be different depending on context; (4) biologists understood how much context can modify inherited characters too recently for it to have penetrated into individual or collective consciousness.  The second, longer part will set out an alternative account of genetic determinism as what has come to be known as a “frozen accident,” that is, as the upshot of historical contingency, of events that might have turned out otherwise – in the case of genetic determinism, events at the foundation of genetics that, on the most recent reconstruction, decided whether William Bateson’s deterministic Mendelism or W. F. R. Weldon’s anti-Mendelian interactionism would frame twentieth-century knowledge of biological inheritance.  A major element of this account will be the role of Mendelian pedagogy in perpetuating Bateson’s determinism far and wide, and relatedly, on the light thrown on that role – including its accidental status – by an experiment in teaching introductory genetics organized along Weldonian lines.

 

Biographical note:

Gregory Radick is a historian and philosopher of science specializing in the history of the modern biological and human sciences. Educated in history at Rutgers (BA 1992) and history and philosophy of science at Cambridge (MPhil 1996, PhD 2000), he has been at Leeds since 2000, serving as Director of the Centre for History and Philosophy of Science (2006–08) and Director of the Leeds Humanities Research Institute (2014–17).

His books include Disputed Inheritance: The Battle over Mendel and the Future of Biology (Chicago, 2023); The Simian Tongue: The Long Debate about Animal Language (Chicago, 2007), which received the 2010 Suzanne J. Levinson Prize of the History of Science Society for best book in the history of the life sciences and natural history; and, as co-editor, The Cambridge Companion to Darwin (Cambridge, 2003; 2nd edition, 2009).

He has held fellowships from the British Academy and the Leverhulme Trust, and served as President of the British Society for the History of Science (2014‒16) and the International Society for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Biology (2019‒21). He writes and lectures frequently for general audiences, contributing regularly to the Times Literary Supplement, and has appeared on BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time and in the PBS/National Geographic television series Genius with Stephen Hawking. In 2022 he was appointed to the Board of Trustees of the Science Museum Group.