The search for organizing principles as a cure against reductionism in systems medicine

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Abstract

Biological complexity has forced scientists to develop highly reductive approaches, with an ever-increasing degree of specialization. As a consequence, research projects have become fragmented, and their results strongly dependent on the experimental context. The general research question, that originally motivated these projects, appears to have been forgotten in many highly specialized research programmes. We here investigate the prospects for use of an old regulative ideal from systems theory to describe the organization of cellular systems 'in general' by identifying key concepts, challenges and strategies to pursue the search for organizing principles. We argue that there is no tension between the complexity of biological systems and the search for organizing principles. On the contrary, it is the complexity of organisms and the current level of techniques and knowledge that urge us to renew the search for organizing principles in order to meet the challenges that are arise from reductive approaches in systems medicine. Reductive approaches, as important and inevitable as they are, should be complemented by an integrative strategy that de-contextualizes through abstractions, and thereby generalizes results.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5938-5948
Number of pages11
JournalFEBS Journal
Volume280
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • fragmentation
  • generalization
  • mathematical general systems theory
  • mathematical modelling
  • multi-scale modelling
  • organizing principles
  • systems biology
  • systems medicine
  • systems theory
  • theorem proving

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