Woodger led the introduction of
positivist philosophy of science into biology with his 1929 book
Biological Principles, He saw a mature
science as being characterised by a framework of
hypotheses which could be verified by facts established by
experiments. He criticised the traditional
natural history style of
biology, including the study of
evolution, as immature science, since it relied on
narrative. For example, he wrote "Admittedly, some hypotheses have become so well established that no one doubts them. But this does not mean that they are known to be true. We cannot determine the truth of a hypothesis by counting the number of people who believe it, and a hypothesis does not cease to be a hypothesis when a lot of people believe it." Woodger set out to play for biology the role of
Robert Boyle's
Sceptical Chymist, intending to convert the subject into a formal, unified science, and ultimately, following the
Vienna Circle of logical positivists like
Otto Neurath and
Rudolf Carnap,
to reduce biology to physics and chemistry. His efforts stimulated the biologist
J. B. S. Haldane to push for the axiomatisation of biology, and helped to bring about the
modern synthesis of evolutionary biology, combining
genetics,
evolution,
ecology and other disciplines. ==Bibliography==