Literature DB >> 8041695

Tempo and mode in the macroevolutionary reconstruction of Darwinism.

S J Gould1.   

Abstract

Among the several central meanings of Darwinism, his version of Lyellian uniformitarianism--the extrapolationist commitment to viewing causes of small-scale, observable change in modern populations as the complete source, by smooth extension through geological time, of all magnitudes and sequences in evolution--has most contributed to the causal hegemony of microevolution and the assumption that paleontology can document the contingent history of life but cannot act as a domain of novel evolutionary theory. G. G. Simpson tried to combat this view of paleontology as theoretically inert in his classic work, Tempo and Mode in Evolution (1944), with a brilliant argument that the two subjects of his title fall into a unique paleontological domain and that modes (processes and causes) can be inferred from the quantitative study of tempos (pattern). Nonetheless, Simpson did not cash out his insight to paleontology's theoretical benefit because he followed the strict doctrine of the Modern Synthesis. He studied his domain of potential theory and concluded that no actual theory could be found--and that a full account of causes could therefore be located in the microevolutionary realm after all. I argue that Simpson was unduly pessimistic and that modernism's belief in reductionistic unification (the conventional view of Western intellectuals from the 1920s to the 1950s) needs to be supplanted by a postmodernist commitment to pluralism and multiple levels of causation. Macro- and microevolution should not be viewed as opposed, but as truly complementary. I describe the two major domains where a helpful macroevolutionary theory may be sought--unsmooth causal boundaries between levels (as illustrated by punctuated equilibrium and mass extinction) and hierarchical expansion of the theory of natural selection to levels both below (gene and cell-line) and above organisms (demes, species, and clades). Problems remain in operationally defining selection at non-organismic levels (emergent traits vs. emergent fitness approaches, for example) and in specifying the nature and basis of levels, but this subject should be the central focus in formulating a more ample and satisfactory general theory of evolution on extended Darwinian principles.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8041695      PMCID: PMC44281          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.91.15.6764

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  12 in total

1.  Unifying biology: the evolutionary synthesis and evolutionary biology.

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2.  A theory of evolution above the species level.

Authors:  S M Stanley
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3.  Heritability at the species level: analysis of geographic ranges of cretaceous mollusks.

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4.  Size of the permo-triassic bottleneck and its evolutionary implications.

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5.  Punctuated equilibrium comes of age.

Authors:  S J Gould; N Eldredge
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Review 7.  The role of extinction in evolution.

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  12 in total

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Authors:  S J Gould; E A Lloyd
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-10-12       Impact factor: 11.205

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Review 5.  Tempo and mode in evolution.

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8.  Impact of the terrestrial-aquatic transition on disparity and rates of evolution in the carnivoran skull.

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10.  The Biological Big Bang model for the major transitions in evolution.

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