S. Helmreich, RECOMBINATION, RATIONALITY, REDUCTIONISM AND ROMANTIC REACTIONS - CULTURE, COMPUTERS, AND THE GENETIC ALGORITHM, Social studies of science, 28(1), 1998, pp. 39-71
Citations number
65
Categorie Soggetti
History & Philosophy of Sciences","History & Philosophy of Sciences","History & Philosophy of Sciences
The genetic algorithm (GA) is a computational procedure that 'evolves'
solutions to optimization problems by generating populations of possi
ble solutions, and then by treating these solutions metaphorically as
individuals that can 'mate' and 'compete' to 'survive' and 'reproduce'
. In this paper, I explore how culturally specific notions of evolutio
n, population, reproduction, sex/gender, and kinship inflect the ways
GAs are assembled and understood. Combining the results of fieldwork a
mong GA workers with analysis of GA texts, I contend that the picture
of 'nature' embedded in GAs is resonant with the values of secularized
Judeo-Christian white middle-class US-American and European heterosex
ual culture. I also maintain that GA formulations are accented by lang
uages inherited from sociobiology. I argue that examining GAs can help
us track how dominant meanings of 'nature' are being stabilized and r
efigured in an age in which exchanges of metaphor between biology and
computer science are increasingly common.