Abstract
There is a trend within philosophy of biology to concentrate
on questions that are strongly related to particular biological
research programs rather than on the general scope of the field
and its relation to other sciences. Projects of the latter kind, of
course, are followed as well but will not be the topic of this review.
Shifting the focus to particular research programs reflects
philosophers’ increased interest in knowledge of, and contribution
to, actual biological research, which is organized in such
programs. It is accompanied by the increasing enthusiasm of
biologists to involve philosophers in the conceptual work of
theoretical biology. I concentrate on the philosophies of four
biological research programs, three of which are devoted to
evolutionary biology, which is still the main field of interest
among philosophers of biology: adaptationism, EvoDevo,
and the developmental systems approach. In addition, a short
sketch of the newly emerging philosophy of systems biology
is given. Several lines of philosophical inquiry can be found
in all of the fields considered here: philosophy contributes to
the conceptual development of biological research programs, it
analyzes structures and delineations of particular research programs,
and sometimes it is involved in a comparative assessment
of biological programs as well. Philosophical projects
that start from the level of a particular research program may
give rise to a bottom-up perspective on biology and allow for
an integrative view of biological research. This may open up
the opportunity to tackle “larger” questions again in an altered
and fruitful manner.