The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

(Michael S) #1

680 THE STRUCTURE OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY



  1. Each hierarchical level differs from all others in substantial and interesting
    ways, both in the style and frequency of patterns in change and causal modes.
    Nature's hierarchy, for all the commonality of its unifying principles (selection, for
    example, acting at each level), does not display fractal structure with self-similarity
    across levels.
    As the theory of hierarchical selection develops, I predict that no subject
    within its aegis will prove more fascinating than the varying strengths and
    modalities among levels. Just as the study of allometry has recorded characteristic
    and predictable scale-dependent differences in structure and function of organisms
    at strongly contrasting sizes—a prominent subject in biology ever since Galileo
    formulated the principle of surfaces and volumes in 1638, and so elegantly codified
    in D'Arcy Thompson's masterpiece of both prose and concept, On Growth and
    Form (1917, second edition, 1942)—so too does individuality as a tiny gene imply
    substantially different properties for a unit of selection than "personhood" as a
    large species or an even larger clade. Allometric effects across hierarchical levels
    should greatly exceed the familiar (and extensive) differences between tiny and
    gigantic organisms for two unsurprising reasons (see Gould and Lloyd, 1999, for a
    detailed development of this argument). First, the size ranges among levels are far
    greater still. Second, organisms share many common properties simply by
    occupying a common level of evolutionary individuality despite an immense range
    of size; but the levels themselves differ strongly in basic modes of individuality,
    and therefore develop far greater disparity.
    But this promise also implies a corresponding danger. In some famous lines
    composed for a quite different, but interestingly related purpose, Alexander Pope
    explored the paradox of man's intermediary status between two such disparate
    extremes, both so desperately needed to know and to understand (the bestial and
    the godly in Pope's concern)—but both so inscrutable as so far from our own
    being:


Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,
A being darkly wise and rudely great...
He hangs between; in doubt to act or rest;
In doubt to deem himself a god, or beast...
Created half to rise, and half to fall;
Great lord of all things, yet a prey to all;
Sole judge of truth, in endless error hurl'd;

The glory, jest, and riddle of the world!^
I appreciate this image of an "isthmus of a middle state"—a narrow standing place
linking two larger worlds of smaller and greater. Pope's dilemma may pack more
emotional punch in its moral meaning (since his greater and lesser worlds define
questions of value rather than geometry), but our problem features greater
intellectual depth—for, surely, a larger conceptual chasm separates the gene from
the clade in modes of evolutionary mechanics, than the bestial from the virtuous in
styles of human behavior.
The problem can be summarized with another, and much older, classical
quotation. "Man is," as Protagoras, wrote in his wonderfully ambiguous epigram,

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