ABSTRACT

These investigations identify and clarify some basic assumptions and methodological principles involved in ecological explanations of plant associations. How are plants geographically distributed into characteristic groups? What are the basic conditions that organize groups of interspecific plant populations that are characteristic of particular kinds of habitats? Answers to these questions concerning the geographical distribution of plants in late 19th century European plant geography and early 20th century American plant ecology can be distinguished according to differing logical assumptions concerning the habitats of plant associations. Through an analysis of several significant case studies in the early history of plant ecology, Konopka distinguishes a logic of habitats that conceives of plant associations in an analogy to individual organisms with a logic that conceives of plant associations in a reciprocal relation to habitat physiography. He argues that a phenomenological conception of the logical attributes of habitats can philosophically complement the physiographic tradition in early plant ecology and provide an attractive alternative to standard reductionism and holism debates that persist today. This wide ranging and original analysis will be valuable for readers interested in the history and philosophy of ecology.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

On the empirical and logical foundations of ecology

chapter 1|37 pages

Varieties of succession

A genealogy of early 20th century plant ecology

chapter 2|30 pages

Logics of habitat fitness

A genealogy of 19th century plant geography

chapter 3|43 pages

Kant’s account of organic form

A phenomenological critique

chapter 4|20 pages

Husserl’s logic of fitness

Parts, wholes, and phenomenological necessity

chapter 5|19 pages

Environing places and geometric space

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion