"Staggering our certainties" about humanity's place at the top of the heap
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In the popular mind, Darwin's great discovery was that apes were our ancestors.
To Stephen Jay Gould, that's not the half of it. The Darwinian ideas that people
really have a hard time embracing, he maintains, are the implications of natural
selection -- a theory that explains the development of Homo sapiens without
reference to any sort of divine plan or vision of progress.
Woven through much of Gould's writing, and at the heart of his new "Full House,"
is an insistent demand that we "cash out" the deepest implications of Darwin's
insights -- and begin to comprehend that our species, far from being the pinnacle
of some inevitable trend in nature toward greater complexity, is simply a tiny
accident occurring on a minor side-branch of the evolutionary tree.
In his 1991 "Wonderful Life," which is a sort of companion to "Full House," Gould
used the example of the Cambrian explosion of species found in the fossils of the
Burgess Shale to demonstrate that "contingency" -- accident, happenstance, the
particular way that events unfold -- plays a central role in determining the fate
of species. Rewind the tape of events to play evolution out once more, Gould
argues, and the odds are against anything like Homo sapiens developing. We're
here because we're here -- not because we had to be here.
"Full House" turns from the fossil record to the nature of statistics. Gould
takes up a series of apparently unrelated and seemingly abstruse questions --
from the disappearance of the .400 batting average in recent decades to the
likelihood of his own surviving an episode of stomach cancer -- and weaves them
into an impassioned critique of the progressive view of evolution.
Ever since Plato, Gould argues, we've tried to understand events by identifying
linear trends based on shifting averages. But in evolutionary terms, there are no
averages -- just individual variations. If we focus on the spectrum of variations
rather than averages and trends, we are less likely to be led astray by minor
events taking place at statistical extremes -- and less likely to conclude that
we are the culmination of a trend toward complex life. On Gould's graph of the
distribution of complexity among life forms (see illustration below), humanity
exists at "the right tail," not the top of the heap.
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It takes a careful writer to make statistical issues like these comprehensible to the general reader -- and a charming one to keep them exciting. Gould, fortunately, is both. "Full House" tries to persuade people that there is no progress inherent in evolution. But the subtitle, "The Spread of Excellence from Plato to Darwin," sounds pretty progressive itself. It's a pun. I'm talking about variation contracting and expanding. And then "from Plato to Darwin" is also a pun, something of an in-joke, because it's not a chronological history, it's a contrast of a Platonic and Darwinian approach. It's a little cryptic, but that's exactly what it's talking about -- measuring excellence by spread. The main point is that we're very hung up on trends -- we make the mistake of interpretation in the Platonic mode, abstracting a system by a single number and seeing how it moves. |
Next: Batting .400 ain't what it used to be.