ISHPSSB Newsletter
International Society for the
History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Biology
Fall 2007
Thirty-fifth Issue
Volume 19, No. 1
President’s Semi-Annual Report
Jim Griesemer
The newsletter has been
long in coming this time around. Our “Fall”
newsletter, following the biennial July conference, usually appears
just a few months later. In recent times, publication date has slipped
to December or January of the next calendar year. Newsletter numbering
also got a little out of whack. In anticipating the day when our
newsletter becomes primarily a living, on-line document with an
archival print and pdf record, rather than primarily a print document
with a posted pdf and html version, I have let the publication date of
the newsletter slip still further. Look for a new formulation of the
newsletter in the Spring number.
After
Exeter
The Exeter meeting (July 25-29, 2007) was a huge success. The opening
reception at the Imperial Pub, hosted on Wednesday evening by outgoing
Secretary Chris Young and outgoing Treasurer Keith Benson, was a
splendid “welcome back to ISHPSSB.” The Presidential Address and
Welcome Plenary Session on Thursday kicked things off in a provocative
and wide-ranging discussion that was sustained in all 144 sessions,
right through to the final presentations (including my own session!) on
Sunday. I am pleased to report that the “ISH-Kabibble”tradition of
innovative, transdisciplinary sessions fostering informal co-operative
exchanges and collaborations was admirably continued. Once again, there
were ample opportunities to meet old friends, make new ones, and to
hear the latest word on topics inside and outside one’s disciplinary
home.
John
Dupré, Director of the ESRC Centre for Genomics in Society
(Egenis) at Exeter, together with Egenis administrative staff, Ginny
Russell and Cheryl Sutton, and the other members of the Local
Arrangements Committee, Keith Benson, Jane Calvert, Christine
Hauskeller, Staffan Müller-Wille, and Hans-Jörg Rheinberger, produced a
wonderfully varied program of activities in and around Exeter to
complement the conference sessions. The Imperial Pub down the hill from
campus provided both a destination and an easy excuse to get a little
air and exercise to complement the exciting conversations, (not to
mention beer and pub food). I thank them all for all their very hard
work over the past two years. I would also like to thank our Program
Co-Chairs, Hans-Jörg Rheinberger and Staffan Müller-Wille, and the
Program Committee (Carlos Sonnenschein, Anya Plutynski, Christine
Hauskeller, Elihu Gerson, Ana Barahona Echeverria, Werner Callebaut,
and Carl Craver), who put together an
exciting and wide-ranging program.We look forward to an equally
engaging program and meeting in Brisbane, Australia in 2009.
It is
always a pleasure to work with the many fine volunteers who make
ISHPSSB such a successful organization — the one that many of us think
of as our “favorite” and with which we most identify professionally and
personally. I want to take the opportunity in this semiannual report to
thank those who completed terms on the Council in the past two years:
Keith Benson (Treasurer), Jason Byron (Student Representative
2005-2007), Joe Cain (Council Member 2003-2007), Kathy Cooke (Council
Member 2003-2007), Michael Dietrich (Past-President 2005-2007), John
Dupré (Local Arrangements 2005-2007), Staffan Müller-Wille (Program
Co-Chair 2005-2007), Hans-Jörg Rheinberger (Program Co-Chair
2005-2007), Phil Sloan (Council Member 2003-2007), and Chris Young
(Secretary). You will notice that Keith Benson and Chris Young do not
have dates of service beside their names. Their service dates back to
the beginnings of the Society. We all owe them a huge debt of gratitude
(not easily repaid, but I’m sure a beer and a smile in Brisbane would
be warmly received). You may also notice that
Gar Allen’s name is not listed here. That’s because I am pleased to
thank him not only for his excellent service the past two years as
President and his service the two years before that as President-Elect,
but also for his continuing to serve in the next two years as
Past-President (and Chair of the Nominations Committee). I also want to
extend thanks to Frédéric Bouchard for serving as Webmaster, and
Roberta Millstein for continuing to serve as Webmaster emerita,
positions not (yet) acknowledged as an official assignments in our
bureaucracy. Indeed, every one of those listed here has served ISHPSSB
in a variety of functions, formal and informal, and we hope they will
continue to do so. All have become trusted advisors and their
“institutional knowledge” is invaluable and much appreciated by the
current novice president. I encourage every member to consider serving
the Society in some capacity.
I extend a warm welcome to those joining
the ISHPSSB family of Officers and Council members. The list of
Officers has been updated at the ISH website:
http://www.ishpssb.org/officers.html. Werner Callebaut, Sandra
Mitchell, and Edna María Suárez Díaz will finish out their Council
terms through 2009. Welcome to incoming Council members John Dupré,
Jean Gayon, and Betty Smocovitis (2007-2011). The new student
“co-representatives” to the Council are Ellen Clarke and Don
Goodman-Wilson, who tied in the student election at Exeter. I am very
excited to work with Ana Barahona, our new President-Elect, Roberta
Millstein, our new Secretary, Lisa
Gannett, our new Treasurer, and Manfred Laubichler and Marsha Richmond,
Program Co-chairs. We are indeed fortunate to have as Local
Arrangements Co-chairs, Rachel Ankeny and Paul Griffiths. We are in
good hands with our Program and Local Arrangements Co-chairs and can
look forward to an exciting meeting in Brisbane in the 200th year after
Darwin’s birth and the publication of Lamarck’s Philosophie Zoologique.
As we begin
preparations for the Brisbane meeting, 12-17 July 2009, Emmanuel
College, St Lucia, Brisbane, Australia(more on that below), the
standing and ad hoc committees that serve ISHPSSB are swinging into
action. Off-year workshop proposals are in the works and due to the
Committee March 7, 2008. The membership of the committees is now
updated on an ISH web page: http://www.ishpssb.org/committees.html.
My twin agenda items for 2008 are (1) to work to improve representation
of social scientists in the society and at
the Brisbane meeting and (2) to enhance our presence on the internet
(“i-ISHPSSB”), with innovations and improvements in the way we do
business (“e-ISHPSSB”), information about the society and means of
facilitiating communication and collaboration among members, as well as
continuing the conversations begun prior to Exeter about ISHPSSB
publications, whether print or electronic. I invite you to contact me,
members of the Council, and Chairs
and members of the various Committees to bring your ideas on these
agenda items (or anything else!) that might increase the value of
ISHPSSB to you.
ISHPSSB 2009
Brisbane

Paul Griffiths
Local Arrangements
Planning for ISHPSSB 2009 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia is well
advanced. A conference website with full details will go online at
http://www.ishpssb2009.org in April 2008.
Approximately 350 very
affordable rooms will be available at the conference venue itself,
Emmanuel College, St Lucia. A range of other accommodation options are
available in downtown Brisbane, which is connected to St Lucia by a
regular high-speed river ferry and a bus line.
All bases are covered
during a stay in South East Queensland. Here is the opportunity to
enjoy a truly urban experience in the state capital Brisbane, safe in
the knowledge that you are still within arm’s reach of quintessential
Australian country, coast and hinterland experiences.
Travel just one
hour south east of the city centre and find yourself at the Gold Coast
admiring 70km of sundrenched beaches, fabulous theme parks and a truly
frenetic lifestyle. Inland of the Gold Coast, and easily accessible
from Brisbane, is the World Heritage-listed Lamington National Park,
not to mention some of Queensland’s most highly awarded vineyards.
Travel the same distance north and find yourself exploring the gorgeous
beaches and spectacular hinterland of the Sunshine Coast. Then there’s
Fraser Island – the largest sand island in the world, the Great Barrier
Reef – over 1,500km of majestic coral home to the greatest variety of
flora and fauna species found in any one location in the world, and the
Whitsunday Islands – an archipelago of green islands and sandy
atolls in the middle of the Great Barrier Reef. This is without
mentioning the Daintree – 1200km of pristine World Heritage-listed
rainforest, and the ‘outback’ – 1 million square kilometres of red
plains, deserts and tropical wetlands.
Program Brisbane 2009
PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
MARSHA RICHMOND AND MANFRED LAUBICHLER
are exploring ways to innovate in the organization of the program for
2009 to accomodate the ever-growing number of people who want to
contribute at the meeting. One idea is to introduce poster sessions
with incentives that encourage wide crossdisciplinary participation.
Look for postings on program-organization in the Spring newsletter and
at the ISHPSSB web site.
ISHPSSB is approaching a size that may
outstrip our ability to plan a conference in which: (1) everyone who’s
work is reasonably within the scope of the society’s interests can
contribute a paper (2) in a session that avoids severe scheduling
conflicts with similar sessions for those interested in a given area,
(3) encourages attendees to sample topics beyond a string of sessions
with a limited number of organizers, and (4) does not result in
extending the length of the conference. These are challenging,
interlocking constraints and I hope you will contribute your ideas on
program organization to the Program Committee.

OK, where do I plug in the
digital projector? Who’s got a flash drive I can borrow to
transfer my presentation
to a PC from my MAC? Is this where the plenary session
meets? Are the
roundtable sessions just beyond those trees? Can I take a boat to
lunch or do I have to
walk?
STUDENT TRAVEL
Lisa Gannett
lisa.gannett@smu.ca
ISHPSSB supports travel to its meetings for graduate students and
independent scholars, based on funding available through memberships
and donations to the society. Please send any recommendations for
policy or procedural changes to me or one of the other members of the
Travel Support Committee.
MEMBERSHIP
RENEWAL
ISHPSSB members typically renew their memberships when they register
for the biennial meeting. Those who do not attend a meeting sometimes
fail to renew. We maintain a liberal renewal policy, continuing to send
Newsletters and renewal information to people who are as much as two
years late paying dues. Currently more than 1/3 of members are late
paying dues. We ask you to renew when your membership expires. Please
renew promptly when your renewal notice arrives in the spring. Remember
that the easiest way to process your renewal is using our convenient
PayPal service online, available through the Society website. If you
have questions about your membership, contact
Secretary Roberta Millstein at: rlmillstein@UCDavis.edu
GRENE PRIZE
Peter Taylor
Sabina Leonelli, currently a Research Officer at the London School of
Economics working on a project, "How Well Do 'Facts' Travel?," was the
2007 winner of the Marjorie Grene Prize for the best manuscript based
on a presentation at one of the two previous ISHPSSB meetings by
someone who was, at the time of presentation, a graduate student.! Her
submission, "Performing Abstraction: Two Ways of Modelling Arabidopsis
thaliana," provides a fresh, interdisciplinary look at the traditional
topics of abstraction in modeling and model-based explanations.
Well-written, coherent, and thoroughly documented, the paper
reconstructs the practices involved in recent research on the flowering
plant Arabidopsis thaliana, a common model organism in plant biology.
Leonelli successfully integrates approaches from sociology, philosophy,
and history of science in her analysis, and focuses less on abstraction
as a characteristic of models and more as a practice or "epistemic
activity". Highlighting two distinct abstraction processes-material and
intellectual- Leonelli also brings out the role of epistemic goals,
commitments, and contexts among scientific communities in developing
models. The paper ultimately gets at a more nuanced, complex
understanding of abstraction in modeling and brings significant,
original insight into the processes and practices of abstraction in
biological research. The Committee received nine entries of high
quality-indeed, at least four of them are already published or in
press. We want to express appreciation for the opportunity to be
stretched beyond our own corners of interdisciplinarity. The various
entries indicate admirably that ISHPSSB continues to play a role in
stimulating innovative contributions within and across the fields of
history, philosophy, and sociology of biology.
Peter Taylor (Chair) and
Tara Abraham, on behalf of the rest of the Committee: Kevin Elliott,
Lisa Gannett, Christiane Groeben, Sandra Mitchell, and Edna
Suárez.
Submit new entries to Tara
Abraham, taabraha@uoguelph.ca, Chair of the 2007-09 Grene Prize
Committe, by March 1, 2009.
GENERAL
MEMBERSHIP MEETING
It has become a common
assumption that the meeting labelled “the
business meeting” is only for officers of the Society. In fact, this
meeting is for the general membership. The ISHPSSB Council holds
separate “business meetings” where only Council members have voting
rights. It is essential to the Society that as many member as possible
attend the General Membership Meeting so that business of concern to
the entire Society can be conducted.
July
27, 2007 Minutes
Chris Young
The meeting was called to order at 6:30 p.m. There was a motion to
suspend the rules to allow us to proceed in the order of the agenda:
moved and seconded.
Many thanks were offered to the outgoing council members Mike Dietrich,
Joe Cain, Kathy Cooke, Phil Sloan, Jason Byron; local arrangements
chair John Dupre; and program co-chairs Staffan Mueller-Wille and
Hans-Jeorg Rheinberger; Keith Benson, and Chris Young.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
Treasurer's Report
Keith Benson explained how the use of PayPal has benefited ISHPSSB.
Specific details of the Society’s account balances are attached to
these minutes.
Secretary's Report
Chris Young reported that membership numbers continue to reflect the
attendance trends at biennial meetings. A membership drive in the fall
will target members who did not attend this year’s meeting. The Society
has 465 members in good standing and 294 members with dues delinquent
(through July 2007). Called for active members to assist incoming
secretary and treasurer.
Nominations and
Elections Committee Report
Mike Dietrich thanked individuals on the
committee and announced the following
results:
• President-elect: Ana Barahona (first president based at an
institution outside the United States)
• Program co-chairs: Manfred Laubichler and Marsha Richmond
• Secretary: Roberta Millstein
• Treasurer: Lisa Gannett
• Council members (2007-2011): John Dupre, Jean Gayon, Betty Smocovitis
Operations Committee
Report
Jim Griesemer thanked the committee members. The committee has assisted
with software selection for the meeting. The committee helped to
consider challenges to adoption of responsibility for History and
Philosophy of the Life Sciences until the decision was made to keep the
journal at the Naples Station without ISHPSSB support. The committee
has initiated further discussion on what publishing options would best
serve ISHPSSB. A goal for the committee in the next two years might be
to implement online voting for society officers.
Site Selection Committee
Report
Jim Griesemer described the acceptance of a proposal for the 2009
meeting in Brisbane, Australia. The meeting will take place 12-16 July.
Proposals for the 2011 meeting should be forwarded to Ana Barahona.
Grene Prize Committee
Report
Lisa Gannett announced Sabina Leonelli, London School of Economics, as
the winner of the Grene Prize. The full
citation was published in the spring 2007
newsletter.
Travel Award Committee
Report
Keith Benson announced that approximately $15,000 was allotted for
student travel awards. He noted that Council had approved an additional
$3000-$5000 for Exeter. Membership Development Committee Report Chris
Young, with help from Kevin Amidon explained that the committee had
discussed strategies for contacting potential members and getting
renewals from existing delinquent members. Current strategies have been
successful, as demonstrated by the membership numbers.
Off Year Workshop
Committee Report
Chris Young acknowledged the successful running of two off-year
workshops. Details have been published previous newsletters.
Student Advisory
Committee Report
Jason Byron noted the success of the offyear workshop run by students
primarily for student members of ISHPSSB. He announced the names of the
corepresentatives (who will share one vote on Council): Ellen Clark and
Don Wilson-Goodman.
Education Committee
Report
John Lynch announced the round-table, scheduled for the following day,
sponsored by the committee. The committee has also worked to assemble
pedagogical materials on a web site: this is ongoing. The committee
also prepared a statement on the teaching of Intelligent Design in
science classes. This statement is part of new business.
Ad Hoc Committee on
Publications Report
Carl Craver reviewed a session on publications that took place on
Thursday. A range of suggestions for ISHPSSB involvement in publication
have been identified. The committee will work to create a business plan
exploring the viability of these suggestions.
Program Committee Report
Staffan Mueller-Wille thanked co-chair Hans-Jeorg Rheinberger and
participants for the approximately 430 submissions.
Local Arrangements
Committee Report
John Dupre deferred to the membership to draw their own conclusions
about the success of their work.
ITEMS BROUGHT FORWARD FROM COUNCIL
The Education Committee prepared a statement on the teaching of
Intelligent Design (ID) in schools, which Council discussed. Council
then brought to the membership the question of whether ISHPSSB should
make statements on controversial issues as well as the question of
whether ISHPSSB should make a statement on ID in particular. The goal
of bringing these questions to the membership was to get input from
members and ultimately to craft a statement that could be put to the
membership for a final vote. Members expressed strong opinions on both
sides of the issue of whether ISHPSSB should make public statements.
Professional responsibility and the precedent of other associations
were cited as reasons for making statements. Concern about professional
objectivity and credibility being undermined by the issuing of such
statements was seen as a major to making statements. Another concern
regarded ISHPSSB’s diffuse and informal nature and its very broad (but
not very particular) expertise with regard to the kinds of
controversial topics that might merit a statement. Procedures for
crafting a statement on any issue were discussed. One method would be
to allow any member to craft a statement, which other members could
choose to sign or not individually. Giving charge to an existing
committee or developing ad hoc committees could also serve as a process
for developing statements for the association to approve or reject.
Some consensus emerged around the notion that the first question of
whether statements should be produced by ISHPSSB, but the process of
how those statements woul be crafted was seen as the primary
concern. The following motion was passed:
Let us defer the
question of whether the society should issue public statements on
controversial topics to Council; that the Council or a committee
designated by Council consider the discussion and comments at the
general members’ meeting to provide to the membership for a vote a
procedure for developing such
statements.
Invitation to the Brisbane Meeting in 2009: Paul Griffiths issued an
enthusiastic invitation to attend the 2009 ISHPSSB meeting in Brisbane,
Australia.
Adjournment
OFF-YEAR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
Chris Young
The call for the
up-coming year’s off-year workshop proposals in 2008
has closed. The information was widely circulated through the ISH
website and listserv. In future years, we hope to have the proposal
process better integrated into a more interactive website. Information
is included here so that those interested in finding out more about
planning off-year workshops or contributing to ones in the works
already for summer 2008 can do so. Proposals were due to Chris Young by
March 7, 2008.
ISHPSSB meets every two years, in oddnumbered calendar
years. During the even-numbered, "off," years, the Society will help to
publicize and lend its name to workshops or meetings that meet the
following criteria.
Such workshops ideally present the opportunity for informal discussions
in a relaxed atmosphere, and may also offer formal sessions. The
Off-Year Workshop Committee will
consider proposals for workshops that
meet the criteria below. Some funding for graduate student (ISHPSSB
members only) travel to the workshops may be available.
Additional details about proposal format and past workshops is
available online: http://www.ishpssb.org/operations/ workshop_comm.html
• meetings must be interdisciplinary (combining the disciplines of
history, philosophy, and or social studies of biology)
meetings must meet all the requirements of Society meetings concerning
accessibility, open access, and open invitations to members
• meetings must be thematic in nature, which distinguishes them from
the regular ISHPSSB meetings
• meetings must demonstrates sufficient international viability to
reflect the unique character of ISHPSSB
•meetings may be organized as workshops or as conventional meetings,
but all members must be eligible to attend
• the selection process for speakers can be determined by clearly
indicated processes that differ from those employed in our usual
meetings
ISHPSSB
BIENNIAL BUDGET, 2006-07
BALANCE SHEET
[1 July 2007]
- Income
- Membership 17,375.00
- Subscriptions 5,396.00**
- Interest and dividend 3,759.92*
- Travel Donation 785.00
Total Income 27,515.92
- Expenses
- Newsletter 1,629.28
- Secretary-Treasurer’s Office (website) 246.75
- Subscriptions 5,396.00**
- Bank fees 1,392.99*
- Graduate Student Travel 400.00
- Site Inspection (Exeter and Brisbane) 992.15
- Meeting Expenses 1,585.00
Total Expenses 11,142.17
- Balance, 06-07" 16,373.75
- Retained Earnings (from 04-05)" 48,823.03
- Total 65,196.78***
*As of 31 August 2006, the savings account at Sea Island Bank was
closed, since it did not yield any significan interest and
the bank charges from the
ISHPSSB credit card machine, which went into that account, were
substantial. Please
note the increase in income that resulted in this change, since ISHPSSB
balances
are now kept in a money market account handled by PayPal (currently
more than
5%)
**Postings of subscription expenses remain 30 days (or more) later than
income from subscriptions
***The ISHPSSB balance is actually $64,901.27, reflecting accounts
receivable but not posted on the balance sheet
TREASURER’S UPDATE
Lisa Gannett
In November and December, 2007, banking services for ISHPSSB were
transferred to Bank of America in Bangor, Maine from Sea Island Bank in
Statesboro, Georgia. The transfer has been complicated
because we have a Canadian Treasurer for a U.S. non-profit corporation
in a post-9/11 era of international banking regulations. My
hope is that choosing the Bank of America—the U.S. bank with the most
branches in the most states—will facilitate the work of the treasurer
in the future. As Bangor is a day’s drive away for this Canadian, it
would likely be a good idea if future treasurers
live in the U.S. Our finances remain healthy: as of January 31, 2008,
there were
balances of $17,699.21 in the Bank of America account and $45,943.72 in
the PayPal account.
Special Offers
from Publishers
Annals of Science
$99
or £60/year; subscribe online via the "news and offers" link on the
journal's website www.informaworld.com/tasc or write directly to the
publisher (contact Lisa or Roberta for address).
Biological Theory
subscribe online via journal's website
http://www.mitpressjournals.org/loi/biot (contact Lisa or Roberta for
code which you need to enter to receive the discounted price).
Biology and Philosophy
$62/year; together with Journal of the History of Biology: $99/year;
order via PayPal on the society"s website.
History and Philosophy
of the Life Sciences
Newly available: $50 or 40euros/year; order via PayPal on the
society's website.
Journal of the History
of Biology
$56/year; together with Biology and Philosophy: $99/year;
order via PayPal on the society's website.
Metascience
An arrangement with Springer is in the works.
Studies in History and
Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
$40 or 37euros/year; order via Jane Croft at Elsevier
(j.croft@elsevier.com; or contact Lisa or Roberta for
regular mailing address).
Contact
James Griesemer, President
University of California, Davis
jrgriesemer@ucdavis.edu
Ana Barahona, President Elect
University of Mexico
abe@hp.fciencias.unam.mx
Lisa Gannett, Treasurer
St. Mary’s University
lisa.gannett@smu.ca
Roberta Millstein, Secretary
University of California, Davis
rlmillstein@UCDavis.edu
Pamela Henson, Archivist
Institutional History Division
Smithsonian Institution Archives
Washington, DC 20560-0414
(202) 786-2735
hensonp@osia.si.edu
Frédéric Bouchard, Webmaster
University of Montreal
f.bouchard@umontreal.ca
For additional Council contact
information, visit our website at
ishpssb.org or contact Roberta
Millstein.
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