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A novel look at lifes unfolding diversity
A review of The Ancestors Tale: A Pilgrimage to the
Dawn of Evolution, by Richard Dawkins
By James Brookfield
24 February 2006
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The Ancestors Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution,
by Richard Dawkins, Mariner Books, 2005, $16, ISBN 0-618-61916-X
(paperback)
In this survey of life on earth and its evolution, Richard
Dawkins adopts a rather innovative approach. Rather than beginning
with the origin and proceeding forward through historical time,
the author starts with modern humans and works backwards. He does
so in order to dispense with the anthropocentric and essentially
religious notion that evolution was somehow fated to result in
human beings.
As Dawkins points out, another species, were it sufficiently
conscious, could with no less justification regard itself as the
intended outcome of evolution, whereas working backwards
one can start with any living species and return to the same ultimate
starting point. This approach is one that stresses the commonality
of all living organisms.
The book imagines a journey back in time, punctuated by 40
narrative pauses, or rendezvous points. At each stop,
we encounter a concestoran ancestor common to
both our lineage and those organisms that branched off into other
species.
The first concestor, for example, is the ancestoralive
six million years agothat modern humans share with the chimpanzee;
the fifth is that which we share with the old world monkeys; the
twentieth is that which we share with the ray-finned fish; the
thirty-ninth is that which we share with the eubacteria.
Dawkins employs the Chaucerian metaphor of a pilgrimage,
where the species that are all traveling backward in time meet
up with their relatives and their concestors. Each concestor has
at least one tale to tell, generally concerning one
of the organisms modern descendants.
For the sake of clarity, we should note that this common ancestor
is not the same as any of its modern descendants. Thus, the ancestor
we share with the gibbons is not itself a gibbon (though it may
have had a number of features that are gibbon-like) or a human
(though it may have features in common with humans). Since the
nodal point where the gibbon line split from ours 18 million years
ago (mya), there has been considerable development and several
splits into species. The concestor is akin to the branching point
on a tree; the modern descendants (including human beings) are
like the leaves.
The Ancestors Tale is the first of Dawkinss
works to explicitly cover the entire history of evolution. His
seven earlier books have focused more on the philosophical and
theoretical aspects of evolutionary biology.
Interspersed with his narrative are significant observations
about the contemporary political situation. On more than one occasion,
Dawkins is sharply critical of the Bush administration. These
pointed remarks fit quite organically into the discussion and
hardly run the risk of dating the book, notwithstanding
objections along these lines from some.
Is it inappropriate to note, as Dawkins does while tracing
the origins of modern humans, that the Fertile Crescent between
the Tigris and Euphrates rivers is the cradle of human civilisation
whose irreplaceable relics in the Baghdad Museum were vandalised
in 2003, under the indifferent eyes of American invaders whose
priorities led them to protect the Ministry of Oil instead?
Should Dawkins refrain from remarking that an accidentally
triggered nuclear war, much like the development of a new species,
is highly likely even if the odds of it happening at any given
moment are small, so long as enough time passes? Especially given,
as Dawkins notes, that some indication of the intellectual level
of the current occupant of the White House, hand atop the trigger,
is shown in his belief that the word is pronounced nucular?
To this reviewer the remarks seem particularly apt, considering
especially the politically charged conflict over the teaching
of evolution in the American public schools. Defense of the science
of evolution has become a political issue.
There are, of course, some inevitable limitations in trying
to survey all of evolutionary history, even in a book of more
than five hundred pages. Nevertheless, one need not agree with
the remark by Carl Zimmer, author of Evolution: The Triumph
of an Idea, in a review published in the New York Times,
that the book is wildly lopsided in that it devotes
excessive attention to the animals at the expense of other organisms.
As one turns to ever-earlier periods, when our line splits
from those that developed into plants, fungi, and ultimately bacteria,
the fossil record thins. Dawkins, in focusing on the descent of
homo sapiens from other animals, develops his attack on the idea,
fashionable among those who try to reconcile acceptance of evolution
with religion, that evolution may be responsible for modest changes
within a species or among closely related species, but cannot
account for the development of human beings from less complex
creatures. And it should be added, in Dawkins defense, that
during the discussion in the later sections of the book covering
the older concestors, his treatment of the philosophical issues
at stake is particularly engaging to the general, non-specialist
audience, as we shall see below.
Certain milestones in evolutionary history
The dates of the rendezvous points are based largely on the
fossil record, which has been checked with genetic information
and with measurements of the decay of certain naturally occurring
radioactive constituents. The relative separation between species
that are cousins can be approximated from the divergence
in their DNA makeup. These approximations are cross-checked against
the fossil record where available.
Of course, the fossil record is not complete and, given the
recycling of sedimentary rock, we should not be surprised at gaps.
In fact, the process of fossilization is so unusual that it is
estimated that 90 percent of species will never be found as fossils.
But the fossils that do exist serve, among other purposes, as
known dating points that can be used to calibrate what is learned
from genetic evidence.
Before reaching the first rendezvous point, Dawkins traces
the development of homo sapiens. First, we meet Cro-Magnon
man, who appears approximately 40,000 years ago during a rapid
development of culture. Tools change dramatically while musical
instruments and cave murals make their first appearance. Not,
relatively speaking, long before that point complex reasoning
and elaborate mathematics lead Dawkins to conclude that modern
humans had already evolved by this point.
Leaving behind the modern homo sapiens, Dawkins draws considerable
attention to Homo ergaster, which first emerged approximately
1.8 mya years ago. H. ergaster (which Dawkins, somewhat
informally, refers to as ergaster), is closely related to H.
erectus, however some scientists take the view that ergaster
is actually more closely related to modern humans than erectus,
whose fossil record extends much further into the modern era.
It was during the existence of ergaster that, for reasons not
fully known, the brain began its explosive development. Dawkins
speculates that some type of positive feedback was likely involved.
He makes an interesting analogy to explain the process: just as
advances in computer hardware and software seem to drive each
other rapidly forward, development of the brain could have fostered
cultural changes like new mating practices or other rituals that
gave an advantage to those with larger brains, driving the process
of brain enlargement ahead.
Late ergaster fossils had brains approximately 1,100 cubic
centimeters in volume (compared with 1,400 for modern humans).
Ergaster had campfires and shaped and used stone tools. Fossils
indicate that ergaster lived in the Middle East and Far East.
There is not yet a consensus view among biologists about ergasters
language facilities. But recent work on the language-related FOXP2
gene reveals a major change that took place approximately 200,000
years ago.
Before leaving the hominids, and getting to the first rendezvous,
Dawkins introduces a discussion of bipedality, which, it now appears
to most scientists, preceded the growth of the brain. Perhaps,
Dawkins suggests, the hands had to be freed for the brain to begin
enlarging.
It is not possible to review even the highlights of each rendezvous
point. But some of the more interesting tales can
be noted here. Through these tales, Dawkins gives a partial portrait
of the rich complexity of life as it exists today, while at the
same time drawing attention to the fact that ultimately these
endless forms, most beautiful, as Darwin put it, have
a common originare therefore our own relatives.
First, there are the species that seem particularly remarkable.
The gibbon, whom we meet at R4 (the fourth rendezvous
point, 18mya), has arms so long that it can hurl itself across
a ten meter gap in the treetops. The common ancestor that we share
with the gibbons is only one million generations removed from
usor, as Dawkins puts it in a way that reminds us of our
shared ancestry, concestor four (C4) would be, approximately,
our 1-millions-great-grandparent.
Then there are rodents and rabbits, whom we meet at R10 (75
mya). More than 40 per cent of all mammal species are rodents,
notes Dawkins, and there are said to be more individual
rodents in the world than all other mammals combined. They
have penetrated almost every habitatdesert, mountain, forest
canopy, river, forest floor, savannah and tundra.
The ability to branch into many habitats is not unique to the
rodents, though. Amphibians have also managed it. There are even
frogs in which a type of antifreeze has evolved to allow the creature
to survive in subzero climates.
Then there is the quirky duck-billed platypus, whom we meet
at R15 (180mya), whose bill has electrical sensors that pick up
fields generated by muscle movements of its prey.
And it is hard not to feel a certain awe for the ants (found
at R26, more than 500 mya). A single nest of leaf cutter
ants, Atta, can exceed the population of Greater London,
Dawkins notes. These ants live symbiotically with a certain fungus
that digests leaves and becomes food for ants and their larvaa
true example of domestication by an agricultural species other
than our own.
Much later, in Taqs Tale (told at R39, probably
more than 2 billion years ago), we learn of Thermus aquatiqus,
which thrives in 70ºC water.
The gene and the organism
The real highlights of Dawkins book are to be found in
the historical and theoretical issues that are posed at a number
of the rendezvous points, particularly those associated with the
relationship between an organism and its genes. Some of these
spill over into other disciplines, such as the discussion of the
difficulty of constructing an historically-correct phylogenetic
tree, a diagram which shows the lineage of related organisms.
It is interesting to note that some of the techniques from
genetic analysis of phylogeny have been applied with considerable
success to literary study, particularly of ancient texts of which
multiple copies exist. It is possible to uncover which extant
manuscript of, say, The Canterbury Tales preceded and served
as the source for another by comparing variations in the texts.
Besides certain technical problems associated with constructing
phylogenetic trees in biology, there is the fundamental problem
of the meaning of the phylogenetic tree itself, Dawkins argues.
Students of biology are quickly familiarized with phylogenetic
trees and the way in which they depict the relation of many species.
But a species is also a composite of DNA from many sources.
So we can consider more than one approach to genetic descent:
that of the species and that of the individual genes that are
found in the species. In this sense, Dawkins argues, My
B-group gene [for blood type] relates me more closely to a B-group
chimpanzee than an A-group human.
Generalizing from such specific examples, Dawkins argues: Species
trees can be drawn, but they must be considered a simplified
summary of a multitude of gene trees. I can imagine interpreting
a species tree in two different ways. The first is the conventional
genealogical interpretation. One species is the closest relative
of another if, out of all the species considered, it shares the
most recent common genealogical ancestor. The second is, I suspect,
the way of the future. A species tree can be seen as depicting
the relationship among a democratic majority of the genome. It
represents the result of a majority vote among gene
trees.
What is the value of taking such an unconventional approach?
Dawkins explains it best in the passage just prior to the above.
He says: The majority of both our molecular and morphological
characteristics show chimps as our closest relatives. But a sizeable
minority shows that gorillas are instead, or that chimps are most
closely related to gorillas and both are equally close to humans.
And certainly we can think of other organisms in which morphological
differences between species will not provide as great a repository
of information as in the apes. In evaluating the descent of different
types of bacteria (treated later), genetic analysis will be a
primary tool. In such investigations, one presumes that majority
vote among the genome approach will be quite essential.
Though The Ancestors Tale takes as its framework
the evolution of species, Dawkins adds that something like
this entire book could be written for each gene. Some examples,
like the origin and development of the genes for the oxygen-carrier
in our blood, hemoglobin, are considered in some detail. This
genes eye view, for which Dawkins has become
well known, does not so much lead to a reductionist view of human
beings (that we are simply an assemblage of genes) as it points
to the interconnectedness of all forms of life and the complex
processes that led to its development over eons.
In another region of The Ancestors Tale, Dawkins
turns to the relationship between the phenotype and the genotype
of an organism. Generally speaking, phenotype refers to the physical
characteristics of an organism, and is a product of the genotypethe
genesand the organisms environment and life history.
For a Darwinian, Dawkins writes, phenotypes
are the manifestations by which genes are judged by selection.
When we say that a beavers tail is flattened to serve as
a paddle, we mean that genes whose phenotypic expression included
a flattening of the tail survived by virtue of that phenotype.
Those beavers that had the genes which expressed themselves in
flatter tails were more likely to survive than those that did
not and carry those genes into future generations. Likewise with
genes for sharp teeth that could gnaw through wood. Significantly,
these sets of genes developed well in each others presence.
Genes have survived through generations of ancestral beavers
because they have proved good at collaborating with other genes
in the beaver gene pool, to produce phenotypes that flourish in
the beaver way of life. In this sense, Dawkins speaks of
organisms as gene cooperatives.
This leads to an important conclusion: Each gene promotes
its own selfish warfare, by cooperating with the other genes in
the sexually stirred gene pool which is the beavers environment.
To put it another way, Selfishness and cooperation are two
sides of a Darwinian coin. In taking this approach, Dawkins
is arguing for a more complex view of an organism and its environment.
One can proceed from the standpoint of the organism or one can
also proceed from the standpoint of one or more of its genes.
In the latter case, the remainder of the genome is itself part
of the environment.
Likewise, we can consider a broader idea of the genes
expression. Referring to an argument from his earlier work, Extended
Phenotype, Dawkins argues here for the idea that not only
the organism, but the products of the organism should be considered
phenotypic. For example, not only should we think of the beaver
and his tail as the phenotypic expression of his genes. The dam
built by the beaver is part of the extended phenotype.
Why consider both under the same heading? The answer,
according to Dawkins, is that both have evolved to become
better and better at preserving those genes; both are linked to
the genes they express by a similar chain of embryological causal
links.
Just as variation among beaver genes for tail flatness led
to better than average survival and reproduction rates for those
who possessed them, variation in the genes that controlled dam-building
behavior would have led to better than average survival and reproduction
rates for the best dam-builders.
The general point that Dawkins asks us to adopt is that the
phenotype of the gene, in the true sense of the word, may extend
outside the skin of the individual. There are countless
other examples, of which a particularly interesting group is that
of parasitic species. Their genes express themselves, in part,
indirectlyin the behavior of their hosts.
In arguing for greater consideration of biological phenomena
at the gene level, Dawkins, it would seem, is pointing out that
this theoretical framework may be a more profitable one in finding
new insights. Though one need not agree with his use of the terms
selfish gene and extended phenotype to
recognize the validity of new methodologies that draw more heavily
on genetic data, it would seem to help in comprehending these
new tools.
For example, in examining speciation of a group of fishes in
Lake Victoria and nearby lakes (at R20, the ray-finned fish),
Dawkins points to a relatively new type of speciation diagram,
the haplotype tree. A haplotype is a fragment of a gene that is
long enough to be observed in many individuals. These individuals
may or may not be of the same species. By drawing a diagram of
a number of haplotypes and their geographic distribution, scientists
can make very well-reasoned hypotheses about the geography and
timing of speciation events. Here it pays to adopt the genes
eye view.
Then there is the potential use of genetic information to provide
a more precise classification scheme for species. For example,
Dawkins introduces a discussion of Hox genes, which provide information
about the position of a cell along the length of an animal. It
turns out that only animals have them, though they have not yet
been found in all organisms considered to be animals. Plants and
fungi have a different type of gene to provide such spatial information.
One precise way to define an animal, therefore, may well be
simply as an organism that contains Hox genes. What is the value
of such an approach? If you forget morphology and look only
at the genes, it emerges that all animals are minor variations
on a very particular theme. Put another way, a particular
genetic development can be correctly pinpointed, in hindsight,
as the point of departure for new ways of life for organisms which
ultimately led to the flowering of entirely new groups.
Other theoretical and historical issues
There is much more in this book worth considering, and it is
possible in a review to deal with only some of it. In The
Prologue to the Galapagos Finchs Tale, Dawkins points
to the fact that Darwinian dynamics, far from being unable to
explain lifes diversity, can drive evolutionary change
at a rate far faster than we ever see in nature.
This can be demonstrated by artificial selection. If scientists
impose conditions on a sample population of, say, fruit flies,
generation after generation, they can see very dramatic changes
quickly. Similar processes are employed in animal breeding. Why
doesnt such rapid change happen often in nature? Because
selective pressures tend to alternate rather than consistently
reward one body type. Drought may follow flood, sending contradictory
signals to an animal population in nearly immediate succession.
How then can rapid change in the forms of organisms take place?
One means is sexual selection, which refers to selection as it
relates specifically to the process of reproduction. For example,
a particular feature may make a creature more attractive to would-be
mates. This is considered in The Peacocks Tale,
told at R16. The brilliant plumage of the male peacock attracts
mates, though it also makes him more easily seen by predators.
Why are such features attractive? Dawkins refers to the argument
that certain easily observable features, like the peacocks
feathers, may be taken by mates as proxies for overall fitness.
A similar dynamic may have facilitated the rapid loss of most
body hair in the genus Homo since it allowed the body to
be more easily seen. Could it also have driven bipedality or brain
development? Dawkins argues for some type of copyingone
ape perhaps developed a fashion of walking upright (which
would also increase his visibility to would-be mates). Others
then mimicked it. Those best able to walk would have found greater
reproductive success. The genes associated with the ability to
walk upright would increase in frequency in the descendant population.
This may be far fetched. However, in pointing to these issues,
Dawkins is drawing attention to the fact that coming to some understanding
of the specific driving forces behind certain evolutionary developments
is not always a straightforward operation.
The notion of a fashion leads Dawkins to introduce the concept
of meme, a term from his 1976 work, Selfish Gene.
A meme is a unit of cultural inheritance. It can be
a fashion, a habit or an idea.
The concept is one that has found use by psychologist Susan
Blackmore, philosopher Daniel Dennett and others. Dawkins suggests
that memes played a part in the enlargement of the brain.
Memes developed and took advantage of variability in brain
features. For example, musical practices (musical memes) could
have arisen accidentally and illustrated differences in cognitive
abilities involved in music in a particular group.
The value of the term meme is a subject of debate,
but it does lend itself here to a consideration of the interrelation
between cultural change (e.g., walking upright) and genetic change
(predominance of genes that foster such behavior).
Dawkins addresses certain questions about the nature of the
species concept at R17 (approximately 340mya), where we meet the
ancestor we share with the amphibians. Here Dawkins introduces
the concept of ring species, which are collections
of related organisms that live in some sort of geographic near-ring
or near-circle. Each can interbreed with his neighbor until one
reaches the break in the ring. At this spot the circle is broken
in that the two geographically adjacent organisms cannot interbreed.
Yet there is a chain of intermediates that can do so. Two populations
are generally considered to be the same species if they can potentially
interbreed. So is a ring species one species or more
than one?
Though ring species are relatively rare, evolution is filled
with an analogous process. It is taken as a truism that parent
and child organisms are of the same species. But there exists
an unbroken chain of descent from any modern species all the way
back to the origin of life. Dawkins sees this paradox as a critical
one. The discontinuous mind that cannot abide such
contradictions must stumble at ring species and their evolutionary
analogues. Indeed, Dawkins goes so far as to blame a tendency
towards discontinuous essentialist thinking for the
historically belated recognition of evolution. Pointing to the
work of the late biologist Ernst Mayr, he faults, rather ahistorically,
Plato and his discussion of ideal forms for setting
the stage for the discontinuous mind. This aside,
the point is one which underscores the significance of a dialectical
approach to the study of evolution.
In the Flounders Tale told at R20 (440mya),
Dawkins discuss the important point that evolution has constraints,
and, in particular, that it can only operate on the foundation
of existing variation in a population. This often leads to what
might be considered imperfections that mar creatures
like the teleost flatfish. In discussing the teleost flatfish,
Dawkins points to the so-called jet engine effect.
Imagine, he writes, how imperfect a jet engine
would be if, instead of being designed on a clean drawing board,
it had to be changed one step at a time, screw by screw, rivet
by rivet, from a propeller engine. He goes on to explain
that teleost flat fish lie on one side. The skull is distorted
so that whichever eye would face down actually moves to the upper
side with the other eye. Picasso would have loved them,
he suggests. A more logical approach to a flat fish would likely
yield a body like the skates, with their wide, flat bellies and
eyes symmetrically on top.
The later rendezvous points, where we meet the earliest forms
of life, are particularly interesting for their treatment of evolutionary
symbiosis, which is really a type of benevolent parasitism. Again
we find here an example of the essentially interconnected nature
of life.
At R37, we hear the tale of Mixotricha paradoxaa
microorganism that lives in the gut of an Australian termite.
It is the mixotricha that actually digests the cellulose for the
termite. Not only termites make use of such microorganisms: For
digesting cellulose, herbivorous mammals all rely on microbes
in their gut. But there is actually another level of symbiosis
at work in the mixotricha/termite. The mixotricha is a protozoan
that contains hundreds of thousands of bacteria inside itself.
These bacteria actually provide locomotion for the mixotricha.
This discussion of symbiosis is a prelude to what Dawkins calls
the Great Historic Rendezvous. At the Great Historic Rendezvous,
formerly free living mitochondria are incorporated into bacterial
cells. The mitochondria, which have their own DNA separate from
those of the cells nucleus, provide energy to the cell.
Likewise, the chloroplasts that absorb solar energy and create
oxygen are absorbed into bacteria cells that will give rise to
the plants. Deep in the foundation of most biological phenomena
is an evolutionary symbiosis.
Going back still further to R39, which is not dated but probably
more than 2 billion years ago, we meet the eubacteria and find
a very unusual case of evolution: the creation of a wheel. The
flagellum of the rhizobium bacteria is able to rotate on a sort
of axle to provide locomotion.
Dawkins points out that self-described intelligent design
theorists have pointed to the wheel as evidence for their
case. The wheel design of the flagellum is, they claim, irreducibly
complex. How could it have evolved in stages?
Of course, the answer is found a few pages later. It turns
out that intermediates have a separate use: as means of creating
round holes in the cell walls of the rhizobiums hosts.
Dawkins points out that the argument of irreducible complexity
is often little more than an appeal to ignorance or, as he puts
it, an argument from personal incredulity. That is,
the intelligent design theorist cannot personally
conceive of an independent use of an evolutionary intermediate.
From this failure of imagination, he generalizes the impossibility
of the existence of such an intermediate.
We must at least briefly consider the final rendezvous point,
the Canterbury of this tale. This, Dawkins writes,
is the singularity known as the origin of life, but we could
better call it the origin of heredity.
What is meant by the use of this term? In short, for the process
of life to begin, the first gene had to come in to being. By gene,
Dawkins means not DNA, but some type of replicator
or molecule that forms lineages of copies of itself.
The first replicator would have needed to possess two important
properties: it would have to be amenable to being copied and it
would need to find some way to regulate the rate at which it is
copied.
In chemistry, agents that speed up or slow down a chemical
process are known as catalysts. Biological catalysts are known
as enzymes. The primeval replicator would likely need to catalyze
its own production; it would serve as the enzyme for the reaction
that produces it.
Experiments have shown that such replicator enzymes could be
created from the materials available in the early atmosphere.
Dawkins notes, We can draw the robust conclusion that biologically
important small molecules, including amino acids, sugars, and,
significantly, the building blocks of DNA and RNA, spontaneously
form when various versions of the Oparin/Haldane primitive Earth
are simulated in the laboratory. [Oparin and Haldane were,
respectively, Soviet and British biochemists working independently
on this problem in the 1920s].
Dawkins points out that RNA, a relative of DNA
used in protein synthesis, may be good enough as a replicator
and enzyme. Unlike DNA, RNA does not form a double helix. Though
its shape is a hindrance in that it results in a relatively high
error rate when copying, it is a benefit in that it allows it
to coil up, as good enzymes do. So it turns out to be a good early
replicator, one that will work more than adequately for organisms
with small genomes (like viruses).
Recent experiments have been able to generate RNA from raw
materials plus a separate catalytic enzyme. New experiments are
planned to synthesize even this catalytic enzyme from the biological
precursors available in the early atmosphere.
Having read the tales of the concestors and their modern descendants,
Dawkins turns to the The Hosts Return, the final
chapter in the book and, in many ways, its most philosophically
suggestive. Here Dawkins proposes to turn around and make the
trip back to the present. Of course, he had taken the opposite
path at the outset of the book in order to oppose an anthropocentric
teleology. But is there, he now asks, a legitimate teleology?
Were certain steps in evolutionary history inevitable or, at least,
very likely? He points to the work of American theoretical biologist
Stuart Kauffman, who takes a statistical approach. If we were
able to rerun evolution thousands of times from the
eukaryotic cell stage forward, what milestones would be common?
Which rare?
Though we cannot perform such an experiment, we can look to
historical analogues. Australia, New Zealand, Madagascar,
South America, even Africa, furnish us with approximate reruns
of major episodes of evolution. These regions were largely
isolated from each other and the rest of the world after the disappearance
of the dinosaurs, when mammals began to flourish. Some modes of
locomotion seem to have evolved repeatedly. Some features seem
to recurthe eye, for example, has evolved 40-60 times independently
in the animal kingdom. Echolocation, like the sonar used by bats,
has arisen four times.
The important point, according to Dawkins, is that the contingency
of human evolution can be overstated, particularly by Stephen
J. Gould and those who take a lead from him. Dawkins defends the
unpopular notion of progress in evolution: not progress towards
humanityDarwin forfend!but progress in directions
that are at least predictable enough to justify the word.
Some biologists predict that a rerun would yield another large
brain biped with two skilled hands, forward pointing camera eyes
and other human features. Likewise, the insect body planwith
articulated exoskeloton, compound eyes, six-legged gait, etc.seems
a likelihood.
Dawkins points out that there is another type of progress
in evolution that has a certain inevitability: arms races
between predators and prey or parasites and their hosts. A predator
evolves better eyesight; the prey develops better camouflage.
A tendency toward ever greater complexity is latent in the process.
Also favored are those adaptations that increase a groups
evolvability. One example: an adaptation that allows
a bird to fly further (and thus get to islands where separation
followed by speciation is more likely) will increase its evolvability.
Watershed events like the development of multi-cellular
body plans also increase evolvability.
This type of approach, assisted in the future, one hopes, by
elaborate computer simulations, should shed further light on the
basic fact that the possibility of life and even many of its particular
characteristics are latent in the development of matter itself.
See Also:
Darwin: An exhibition at the American
Museum of Natural History
[15 February 2006]
An appreciation of
biologist Ernst Mayr (1904-2005)
[3 May 2005]
On the death of paleontologist
Stephen Jay Gould
[1 July 2002]
The joy of science
A review of Unweaving the Rainbow by Richard Dawkins
[8 January 1999]
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