Abstract :
In this paper, I discuss the discovery of the DNA structure by Francis Crick and James
Watson, which has provoked a large historical literature but has yet not found entry
into philosophical debates. I want to redress this imbalance. In contrast to the available
historical literature, a strong emphasis will be placed upon analysing the roles played
by theory, model, and evidence and the relationship between them. In particular, I
am going to discuss not only Crick and Watson’s well-known model and Franklin’s
x-ray diffraction pictures (the evidence) but also the less well known theory of helical
diffraction, which was absolutely crucial to Crick and Watson’s discovery. The insights
into this groundbreaking historical episode will have consequences for the ‘new’ received
view of scientific models and their function and relationship to theory and world. The
received view, dominated by works by Cartwright and Morgan and Morrison ([1999]),
rather than trying to put forth a ‘theory of models’, is interested in questions to do
with (i) the function of models in scientific practice and (ii) the construction of models.
In regard to (i), the received view locates the model (as an idealized, simplified version
of the real system under investigation) between theory and the world and sees the
model as allowing the application of the former to the latter. As to (ii) Cartwright has
argued for a phenomenologically driven view and Morgan and Morrison ([1999]) for
the ‘autonomy’ of models in the construction process: models are determined neither by
theory nor by the world. The present case study of the discovery of the DNA structure
strongly challenges both (i) and (ii). In contrast to claim (i) of the received view, it was
not Crick and Watson’s model but rather the helical diffraction theory which served a
mediating purpose between the model and the x-ray diffraction pictures. In particular,
Cartwright’s take on (ii) is refuted by a comparison of Franklin’s bottom-up approach
with Crick andWatson’s top-down approach in constructing the model. The former led
to difficulties, which only a strong confidence in the structure incorporated in the model
could circumvent.