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MENTAL FURNITURE #8
Darwinian Evolution
©1997 Dennis Leri
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In his introduction to
Darwin's The Expression of Emotions
in Man and Animals Konrad Lorenz has this to say: "...Jacob von
Uexkull once said rather pessimistically that today's truth was, after
all, nothing but the error of tomorrow. Thereupon... Otto Koehler
answered, 'No the truth of today is the special case of tomorrow!'...
This second statement contains a very much deeper truth. In science,
and particularly in biology, the discoverer of a new explanatory
principle is more than apt to overrate the range of its applicability.
...One may indulgently regard this little weakness as the well-merited
prerogative of genius, because the great man's pupils, though lesser
discovers, are apt to be better at verification than their inspired
teacher and can be relied upon to clip the wings of his genius when it
threatens to soar too high. It is only when the pupils degenerate into
disciples who unquestioningly accept the far sweeping statements of
their master that danger arises, and a newly born epistemophagus
(knowledge-devouring) monster, another 'ism' rears its ugly head."
"However, the greatest of all discoverers in the field of biology did
not commit the error just discussed: when Charles Darwin discovered
natural selection, the explanatory principle that was destined to
change our outlook on man and the world more than any other before it,
he decidedly did not overestimate the number of phenomena that could be
explained on its basis. If anything, he erred on the side of
understatement.... Like all really great scientific discoverers, Darwin
possessed an almost uncanny ability to reason on the basis of
hypotheses which were not only provisional and vague but subconscious.
He deduced correct consequences from facts more suspected than known,
and verified both the theory and the facts by the obvious truth of the
conclusions thus reached. In other words, a man like Darwin knows more
than he thinks he knows, and it is not surprising that the consequences
of his knowledge reach far and in different directions."
"Behavior patterns are just as conservatively and reliably characters
of the species as are the forms of bones, teeth, or any other bodily
structures. Similarities in inherited behavior unite the members of a
species, of a genus, and of even the largest taxonomic units in exactly
the same way in which bodily characters do so. The conservative
persistence of behavior patterns, even after they have outlived, in the
evolution of a species, their original function is exactly the same as
that of organs... The adaptation of the behavior patterns of and
organism to its environment is achieved in exactly the same manner as
that of its organs, that is to say on the basis of information which
the species has gained in the course of its evolution by the age-old
method of mutation and selection. This is true not only for the
relatively rigid patterns of form or behavior, but also for the
complicated mechanisms of adaptive modification, among which are those
generally assumed under the concept of learning."
One of the underpinnings of Moshe's concept of learning how to learn is
the notion of organic learning. Essential to organic learning is the
theory of evolution. Not just any old evolutionary theory but Darwin's.
Evolution as conceived of by Darwin is one of the most powerful
theories in the history of science and Western thought. It is also one
of the most misunderstood theories. Take the phrase "survival of the
fittest." Some suppose that it summarizes evolutionary theory. It does
not. The phrase is both incomplete and misleading. The idea that
evolution is progressive, that present life forms are improvements over
earlier forms, is also a misinterpretation. Another common error in
characterizing evolutionary theory is that organisms can be arranged on
an evolutionary ladder from bacteria to man.
The more orthodox definition of evolution is as a change in the gene
pool of a population over time. The gene pool is the set of all genes
in a species or population. The English moth, Biston betularia, is a
frequently cited example of observed evolution. In 19th century
industrial England, rare black variants spread through this moth
population as a result of their habitat becoming darkened by soot from
factories. Birds could see the lighter colored moths more readily and
ate more of them. The moth population changed from mostly light colored
moths to mostly dark colored moths. Since their color was determined by
a single gene, the change in frequency of dark colored moths
represented a change in the gene pool. This change was, by definition,
evolution.
Evolution is often characterized as either 'microevolution' as with the
moths above or "macroevolution" when referring to larger changes (such
as the emergence of a new species) taking place over longer periods of
time. Macroevolution is cumulative microevolution. In defining
evolution as a change in the gene pool it means that evolution is a
population level phenomena. Therefore, only groups of organisms evolve.
Individual organisms do not evolve. Evolutionarily stated, it is
necessary to view populations as collections of individuals with
different traits. For example, as the frequency of black moths
increased, the "average" moth did not get progressively darker. There
were never any "average" half-white/half-black moths in the population.
Evolution is often equated with morphological change, i.e. organisms
changing shape and/or size over time. An example would be a dinosaur
species evolving into a species of bird. It is important to note that
evolution is often accompanied by morphological change, but this need
not be the case. Evolution can occur without morphological change; and
morphological change can occur without evolution. That humans are
larger now than in the past is not an example of evolutionary change.
Better diet and medicine brought about this change. The gene pool did
not change -- only its manifestation did.
An organism's phenotype -- comprised by its morphological,
physiological, biochemical, behavioral and other properties -- is
determined by its genes and its environment. Phenotypic changes induced
solely by changes in environment do not count as evolution because they
are not heritable; in other words, the change is not passed on to the
organism's offspring. The fundamental error of Lamarckian evolution was
to assume that learned characteristics could be passed on. Most changes
due to environment are fairly subtle (e.g. size differences). Large
scale phenotypic changes (such as dinosaur to bird) are obviously due
to genetic changes, and therefore are evolution.
Evolution is not progress. Organisms simply adapt to their current
surroundings and do not necessarily become "better" over time. Gregory
Bateson called it survival of "the fit" rather than of "the fittest." A
trait or strategy that is successful at one time may be deleterious at
another. Studies in yeast have shown that "more evolved" strains of
yeast can be competitively inferior to "less evolved" strains. An
organism's success depends a great deal on the behavior of its
contemporaries; for most traits or behaviors there is likely no optimal
design or strategy, only contingent ones. Bio-epistemologist Francisco
Varela prefers the notion 'viable' to that of 'optimal' when specifying
the ongoing fit of organism to environment and environment to organism.
How does evolution work? If evolution is a change in the gene pool;
what causes the gene pool to change? Several mechanisms can change a
gene pool, among them: natural selection, genetic drift, gene flow,
mutation and recombination. It is important to understand the
difference between evolution and the mechanisms that bring about this
change. Why? Because while the fact of evolution is not in question,
the processes bringing it about are not all clearly understood.
Bringing about a change in the gene pool assumes that there is genetic
variation in the population to begin with, or a way to generate it.
Genetic variation is "grist for the evolutionary mill." For example, if
there were no dark moths, the population could not have evolved from
mostly light to mostly dark. In order for continuing evolution there
must be mechanisms to increase or create genetic variation (e.g.
mutation) and mechanisms to decrease it (e.g. natural selection and
genetic drift).
Natural selection is the only mechanism of adaptive evolution; it is
defined as differential reproductive success of pre-existing classes of
genetic variants in the gene pool. In other words, the genetic
constitution of some individuals are (on average) better than others at
contributing their genetic variations to the next generation's gene
pool. Selection is not a force in the sense that gravity or magnetism
is no matter how often some biologists speak of it that way. Selection
is not a guided or cognizant entity; it is simply an effect. Darwin
stated the case originally that it was 'as if there were a natural
selection, comparable in its separating effect to the artificial
selection a farmer makes of the varieties that interest him. Darwin
himself was quite clear in his metaphoric use of the term selection.
There is in the theory of evolution no need for the environment to play
the role of 'selector.' When supplied with genetic variation, natural
selection allows organisms to adapt to their current environment and
their environments to them. It does not, however, have any foresight.
Structures or behaviors do not evolve for future utility. An organism
must be, to some degree, adapted to its environment at each stage of
its evolution. As the environment changes, new traits (new combinations
of genetic variation) may be selected for. As an organism changes it
modifies its environment. Large changes in populations are the result
of cumulative natural selection -- numerous small changes are
introduced into the population by mutation; the small minority of these
changes that result in a greater reproductive output of their bearers
are amplified in frequency by selection.
Natural selection works at the level of the individual. In the example
I gave earlier, dark colored moths had higher reproductive success
because light colored moths suffered a higher predation rate. The
decline of light colored genetic variants was caused by light colored
individuals being removed from the gene pool (selected against). It is
the individual organism that either reproduces or fails to reproduce.
Genes are not the unit of selection (because their success depends on
the organism's other genes as well); neither are groups of organisms a
unit of selection. There are some exceptions to this 'rule.' The
individual organism reproduces or fails to reproduce. It competes
primarily with others of it own species for its reproductive success.
Natural selection does not necessarily produce individually optimal
structures or behaviors. Selection targets the organism as a whole, not
individual traits. So, specific traits are not optimized, but rather
combinations of traits. In addition, natural selection may not
necessarily even select for the most optimal set of traits.
Other important mechanisms of evolution are genetic drift, mutation,
recombination and gene flow. They are worth looking into. The main
thing to remember is that evolution is not progress. Evolution should
not be represented as a series of improvements from simple cells,
through more complex life forms, to humans (the pinnacle of evolution).
Modern biologists hold that all species have descended from a common
ancestor. As time went on, different lineages of organisms were
modified with descent to adapt to their environments. Thus, evolution
is best viewed as a branching tree or bush, with the tips of each
branch representing currently living species. No living organisms today
are our ancestors. Every living species is as fully modern as we are
with its own unique evolutionary history. No extant species are "lower
life forms," atavistic stepping stones paving the road to humanity. A
related, and common, fallacy about evolution is that humans evolved
from living species of apes. This is not the case -- humans and apes
share a common ancestor. Both humans and living apes are fully modern
species; the ancestor we evolved from is now extinct and was not the
same as present day apes (or humans for that matter). Our closest
relatives are the chimpanzee and the pygmy chimp. Evolution is still
occurring through the mechanisms listed above; all organisms and their
surroundings are co-evolving.
The theory of evolution is what unifies all of biology. Evolutionary
biologists can provide an elegant answer to the question, "How did we
human beings get here?" Evolutionary theory distinguishes and
differentiates between an individual's personal history (ontogeny) and
her or his impersonal species history (phylogeny). The difference
between the ontogenetic and the phylogenetic is the difference that
makes a difference in Feldenkrais' profound approach to learning. The
very notion of 'function,' as used by Feldenkrais, binds together the
biological means of organismic viability with new instances for a
fuller realization of one's potential. We individuate in the time
allotted to each of us against the backdrop of the broad expanse of
evolutionary time. By utilizing the distinction between phylogenetic
and ontogenetic patterns of behavior we can use the former to influence
and change the latter. Borrowing from Lorenz's introduction we can say
Moshe Feldenkrais did not overestimate the breadth of application of
his ideas and, if anything, he erred on the side of understatement.
Moshe knew more than he thought he knew, and it is not surprising that
the consequences of his knowledge reach far and in different directions.
References:
Mind and Nature &
Steps to an Ecology of Mind-- Gregory Bateson; The Tree of Knowledge -- Maturana
and Varela; What is Life? --
Margulis and Sagan; anything by Stephen J. Gould; Evolution sites on
the Internet; and Darwin's own work.
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