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Jacobin now has an obit for Richard Levins too.
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https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/01/richard-levins-obituary-biological-determinism-dialectics/


Richard Levins, the great radical and scientist, passed away on January 19. 
Levins was a profound thinker who made foundational contributions to scientific 
and intellectual fields ranging from community ecology and evolutionary theory 
to mathematical biology, public health, and the philosophy of science.

His extraordinary scientific legacy is matched by his legacy as a radical and 
activist. Blacklisted in 1950s for his activism, Levins subsequently moved to 
Puerto Rico with Rosario Morales, his wife and lifelong partner, and became an 
important member of the Puerto Rican independence and antiwar movements.

Levins was also a leading intellectual figure in the fight against biological 
determinism and remained an activist to the end of his life, often lecturing on 
his favorite topic: the use of dialectics to understand complexity and change 
in both the natural and social sciences.

While I did not know Levins personally, few people have had a greater 
intellectual and moral influence on me. Levins showed me it was possible to be 
a serious scientist and a radical — a revelation for a scientifically and 
mathematically inclined young adult growing up at the “end of history.” He 
taught me to understand how the prejudices of “bourgeois society” shape our 
views of science and nature, and gave me the intellectual and moral courage to 
fight for an emancipatory vision of science.

As a scientist Levins had an incredible ability to analyze complex systems — to 
examine them from multiple, contradictory viewpoints simultaneously — without 
falling into the seductive traps of reductionism or static thinking. In the 
1960s, Levins authored a series of extraordinary papers that helped launch the 
field of community ecology — all while facing FBI harassment for his activist 
work with the Puerto Rican left.

These papers combined sophisticated mathematical techniques with profound 
ecological insights to investigate the origins of biodiversity and evolution in 
fluctuating environments. Levins seamlessly shifted intellectual fields, going 
on to make foundational contributions in areas as varied as mathematical 
modeling of complex systems, agroecology, and disease ecology.

Levins was inducted into the US National Academy of Sciences — the country’s 
most prestigious organization of scientists — but resigned shortly afterwards 
to protest the organization’s role in advising the US military during the 
Vietnam War. After his first visit to Cuba in 1964, Levins also served as a 
scientific adviser to the Cuban government.

Levins outlined his approach to analyzing the world in his book The Dialectical 
Biologist, penned with his longtime comrade and scientific collaborator, 
Richard Lewontin. (The work, whose title is an allusion to Engels’s Dialectics 
of Nature, is dedicated “to Fredrich Engels, who got it wrong a lot of the time 
but who got it right when it counted.”) In passages that were scientifically 
decades ahead of their time, the book outlines a holistic way of looking at 
nature and the world — an outlook now fully embraced by the new fields of 
systems biology and complex systems:

The dialectical view insists that persistence and equilibrium are not the 
natural state of things but require explanation, which must be sought in the 
actions of the opposing forces . . . The opposing forces are seen as 
contradictory in the sense that each taken separately would have opposite 
effects, and their joint action may be different from the result of either 
acting alone . . . The relations among the stabilising and destabilising 
processes become themselves the objects of interests, and the original object 
is seen as a system, a network of positive and negative feedbacks.

This dialectical outlook undergirded Levins’s deep skepticism of, and prolonged 
fight against, biological determinism and sociobiology.

In one of the book’s most incredible passages, Levins and Lewontin use the 
example of gravity to show the inseparability of genes, environment, and 
organism. They point out that bacteria
are largely outside the influence of gravity as a consequence of their size, 
that is, as a consequence of their genes. On the other hand, they are subject 
to another universal force, the Brownian motion of molecules, which [humans] 
are protected from by our large size, again a consequence of our genes.

Thus, whether an organism is subject to something as universal and seemingly 
natural as the laws of gravity depends on its genes. In this way, they uprooted 
biological determinism’s intellectual foundation: the reductionist fallacy that 
it is possible to detach genes from environment.

Levins’ scholarly critique of biological determinism was complemented by a deep 
commitment to radical scientific activism. He was a founding member and 
participant in Science for the People, an organization established in 1969 to 
act on leftist concerns related to science and technology, including the 
militarization and corporatization of science, the political implications of 
sociobiology, and environmental issues. The group published a magazine that 
carried the same name, and helped radicalize a generation of scientists through 
its organizing in universities and communities.

A couple years ago, I attended one of Levins’s talks on dialectics. I was 
feeling depressed about the state of science, particularly its increased 
corporatization and militarization. During the question and answer period, I 
asked for advice about surviving as a radical scientist.

Levins, always affable and upbeat, reminded me that science is the shared 
legacy of all of humanity, and our ability to do science rests on the labor and 
surplus value produced by everyone before us. He told me it was our obligation 
as scientists to make sure we fight the good fight and ensure the fruits of 
science are not monopolized by the powerful and the elite.

Richard Levins both embodied that ideal and struggled to make it a reality.


------------------------------------
Jim Farmelant
http://independent.academia.edu/JimFarmelant
http://www.foxymath.com 
Learn or Review Basic Math



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