Living Precisely in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
Coen, Deborah R. Journal of the History of Biology 39 (2006): 493-523.
Vienna’s Institute of Experimental Biology, better known as the
Vivarium, helped pioneer the quantification of experimental biology
from 1903 to 1938. Among its noteable scientists were the director Hans
Przibram and his brother Karl (a physicist), Paul Kammerer, Eugen
Steinach, Paul Weiss, and Karl Frisch. The Vivarium’s scientists sought
to derive laws describing the development of the individual organism
and its relationship to the environment. Unlike other contemporary
proponents of biological laws, however, these researchers created an
explicitly anti-deterministic science. By “laws” they meant statistical
regularities or “patterns.” They interpreted their experimental results
in ways that forged a “third way” between determinism and pure
spontaneity, aiming to capture the complexity of the interaction
between the organism and its environment. This common feature of their
research was made possible by the availability at the Vivarium of the
latest in climate-control technology and of methods borrowed from
statistical physics. The deeper roots of this search for a “third way”
lay, I suggest, in the shared educational, social, and aesthetic
experiences of the laboratory’s workers.