| Article | Alexander Powell, Maureen A. O’Malley, Staffan Müller-Wille, Jane Calvert, and John Dupré, Disciplinary Baptisms: A Comparison of the Naming Stories of Genetics, Molecular Biology, Genomics, and Systems Biology | Abstract | Understanding how scientific activities use naming stories to achieve
disciplinary status is important not only for insight into the past, but for evaluating current
claims that new disciplines are emerging. In order to gain a historical understanding of how
new disciplines develop in relation to these baptismal narratives, we compare two recently
formed disciplines, systems biology and genomics, with two earlier related life sciences,
genetics and molecular biology. These four disciplines span the twentieth century, a period
in which the processes of disciplinary demarcation fundamentally changed from those
characteristic of the nineteenth century. We outline how the establishment of each discipline
relies upon an interplay of factors that include paradigmatic achievements, technological
innovation, and social formations. Our focus, however, is the baptism stories that give
the new discipline a founding narrative and articulate core problems, general approaches
and constitutive methods. The highly plastic process of achieving disciplinary identity is
further marked by the openness of disciplinary definition, tension between technological
possibilities and the ways in which scientific issues are conceived and approached, synthesis
of reductive and integrative strategies, and complex social interactions. The importance
– albeit highly variable – of naming stories in these four cases indicates the scope for
future studies that focus on failed disciplines or competing names. Further attention to
disciplinary histories could, we suggest, give us richer insight into scientific development. | Keywords | Discipline formation; genetics; molecular biology; genomics; systems
biology
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