Daniel J Nicholson
@djnicholson.bsky.social
1.6K followers 280 following 13 posts
Integrating the History, Philosophy, & Theory of Biology
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djnicholson.bsky.social
My little book on Schrödinger's famous classic 'What Is Life?' is out! Offering the most comprehensive analysis ever undertaken of the book's origins, reception, impact, and legacy, it uncovers Schrödinger's motivations in writing it, and shows how it has shaped our current understanding of the cell
<i>What Is Life?</i> Revisited
Cambridge Core - Philosophy: General Interest - <i>What Is Life?</i> Revisited
www.cambridge.org
djnicholson.bsky.social
¡Gracias, Alejandro! Este proyecto ha sido toda una odisea, pero me alegra mucho poder compartirlo por fin con el mundo. Verás que te agradezco explícitamente en un pie de página los datos que encontrastes en los archivos de CUP, y también al final, por supuesto :) Un abrazo
djnicholson.bsky.social
Thanks Ehud! I'm curious to hear what you make of it!
djnicholson.bsky.social
Thanks Chris. And hope the conference today goes well! I wil try to catch some of it online.
djnicholson.bsky.social
My little book on Schrödinger's famous classic 'What Is Life?' is out! Offering the most comprehensive analysis ever undertaken of the book's origins, reception, impact, and legacy, it uncovers Schrödinger's motivations in writing it, and shows how it has shaped our current understanding of the cell
<i>What Is Life?</i> Revisited
Cambridge Core - Philosophy: General Interest - <i>What Is Life?</i> Revisited
www.cambridge.org
djnicholson.bsky.social
¡¡Enhorabuena, Alejandro!! 🎉🎉🎉
djnicholson.bsky.social
I think the reasons are not just institutional. Historians of science should have the freedom to do whatever they want, but they should not be terribly surprised when scientists ignore them. In any case they don't own history. The history of science is far too important to be left only to historians
djnicholson.bsky.social
Historians tend to write for other historians, not for scientists (or philosophers, for that matter)
Reposted by Daniel J Nicholson
If you missed that great Cognizing life conference in Tubingen organized by Christoph Hueck two weeks ago, here are the videos of the presentations. Talks by Denis Walsh, Joan Steigerwald, Dan Nicholson and many others.
www.clc2025.de/videos
Reposted by Daniel J Nicholson
jwelowe.bsky.social
Weds 14:30/16:30 #ISHPSSB2025 - Biological Variation: Theory and Practice

With @djnicholson.bsky.social, Marlene van den Bos, Alan C. Love, Staffan Müller-Wille, Greg Radick, @rosetrappes.bsky.social, Cristina Villegas

Explore variation across distinct epistemic & ontological frameworks with us!
djnicholson.bsky.social
Really looking forward to this, Phil! (And to finally meeting you in person)
Reposted by Daniel J Nicholson
yavannakemi.bsky.social
Looking forward to the "Cognizing Life Conference 2025", 16.-19. July! With talks by @djnicholson.bsky.social, @dalianassar.bsky.social, @gregoryrupik.bsky.social, @philippehune.bsky.social and many more! You can participate online, all info here: www.clc2025.de
#HPBio #PhilSci #HistSci
Screenshot of the website for the Cognizing Life Conference 2025.
djnicholson.bsky.social
Every biological entity is unique; no two are exactly alike. Is this a trivial observation, or a profound metaphysical claim about the living world? Read my new paper & find out! It deals with Mayr's "Population Thinking"; one of the most familiar yet tragically misunderstood ideas in all of biology
Population Thinking and the Uniqueness of Biological Entities - Acta Biotheoretica
Acta Biotheoretica - The concept of ‘population thinking’ was introduced by Ernst Mayr in the mid-twentieth century and it has since become one of the most pervasive notions in the...
link.springer.com
Reposted by Daniel J Nicholson
duhe.bsky.social
This is a very NEAT piece about biomolecular condensates from @philipcball.bsky.social chronicling fascinating discoveries. On the philosophical implications of a lot of this you should read @djnicholson.bsky.social.
A brief ego thread on how this relates to my work on genomes follows. 1/4
Mysterious Blobs in Cells Are Changing the Way We Understand Life
Tiny specks called biomolecular condensates are leading to a new understanding of the cell
www.scientificamerican.com
djnicholson.bsky.social
Thanks for the kind shout-out Ehud. Phil's article is great. And interesting to read how your work intersects with some of these issues. I'm planning to write much more about this when time allows
djnicholson.bsky.social
Here's another prominent example of a Phil Sci book written in dialogue form
djnicholson.bsky.social
So glad you enjoyed it, Greg!
Reposted by Daniel J Nicholson
kohngregory.bsky.social
Just came across @djnicholson.bsky.social's wonderful biography of one of my favorite biologists,E. S. Russell. philpapers.org/archive/NICE...