桶和探照灯:制定和测试关于转基因作物杂草和入侵潜力的风险假设。

Environmental biosafety research Pub Date : 2010-07-01 Epub Date: 2011-04-05 DOI:10.1051/ebr/2011101
Alan Raybould
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引用次数: 37

摘要

水桶和探照灯是科学知识增长的对立理论的隐喻。桶理论提出,知识是通过不带先入之见地观察世界而获得的,知识来自于支持假设的观察的积累。这一理论有许多问题,其中最严重的问题是,它似乎没有提供一种方法来区分可以解释一组特定观察结果的许多假设。探照灯理论提出,先入之见是不可避免的,知识的进步是通过不断的批评和修正来改进我们的先入之见——我们的假设。假设是一盏探照灯,它照亮了检验假设并揭示其缺陷的观察结果,从而通过消除错误假设来增加知识。对转基因作物种植风险的研究往往采用“桶理论”;虽然产生了许多数据,但对风险的认识并没有提高。探照灯理论的应用,即风险评估测试转基因作物不会有害的假设,似乎提供了一种更好的描述风险的方法。环境风险评估的有效性不应以对转基因作物的观察量的大小来衡量,而应以风险假设探照灯澄清种植该作物可能产生的风险的能力来衡量。这些观点可以通过一些假设的例子来说明,这些假设可以被测试,以评估转基因作物及其杂交品种成为杂草或入侵非农业栖息地的风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The bucket and the searchlight: formulating and testing risk hypotheses about the weediness and invasiveness potential of transgenic crops.

The bucket and the searchlight are metaphors for opposing theories of the growth of scientific knowledge. The bucket theory proposes that knowledge is gained by observing the world without preconceptions, and that knowledge emerges from the accumulation of observations that support a hypothesis. There are many problems with this theory, the most serious of which is that it does not appear to offer a means to distinguish between the many hypotheses that could explain a particular set of observations. The searchlight theory proposes that preconceptions are unavoidable and that knowledge advances through the improvement of our preconceptions - our hypotheses - by continuous criticism and revision. A hypothesis is a searchlight that illuminates observations that test the hypothesis and reveal its flaws, and knowledge thereby increases through the elimination of false hypotheses. Research into the risks posed by the cultivation of transgenic crops often appears to apply the bucket theory; many data are produced, but knowledge of risk is not advanced. Application of the searchlight theory, whereby risk assessments test hypotheses that transgenic crops will not be harmful, seems to offer a better way to characterise risk. The effectiveness of an environmental risk assessment should not be measured by the size of the bucket of observations on a transgenic crop, but by the power of the risk hypothesis searchlights to clarify the risks that may arise from cultivation of that crop. These points are illustrated by examples of hypotheses that could be tested to assess the risks from transgenic crops and their hybrids becoming weeds or invading non-agricultural habitats.

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