Title: The Development of Evolutionary Theory
1The Development of Evolutionary Theory
- A Brief History of Evolutionary Thought
Physical Anthropology Spring 2006
2A Brief History of Evolutionary Thought
- The individual most responsible for the
elucidation of the evolutionary process was
Charles Darwin. - However, the theory of Natural Selection was
independently developed by another Englishman
Alfred Russel Wallace. - Medieval concept of statsis
- all aspects of nature including all forms of life
and their relationships to one another, were seen
as fixed and unchanging. - Christianity was taken quite literally.
- God had created all life forms exactly as they
existed in the present. - Alterations were seen as impossible because they
would have run contrary to Gods plan. This
belief is know as fixity of species. - The notion that species, once created, can never
change.
3- Great Chain of Being.
- the belief that all Gods creations were arranged
in a hierarchy that progressed from the simplest
organisms to the most complex - First proposed by Aristotle
- The Earth was full and that nothing new (such
as species) could be added. - Grand Design that is Gods design (the
universe). - Argument for design
- anatomical structures were viewed as planned to
meet the purpose for which they were required. - Archbishop James Ussher (1581-1656)
- The date the Grand Designer started his work was
at noon on Sunday, October 23, 4004 B.C. - The prevailing notion of the Earths brief
existence, together with fixity of species,
provided a formidable obstacle to the development
of evolutionary theory WHY?
4- What, then, upset the medieval belief in a rigid
universe of planets, stars, plants, and animals?
5The Scientific Revolution
- The discovery of the New Word and the
circumnavigation of the globe in the 15th century
overturned some very fundamental ideas about the
planet. - Earth was round
- awareness of biological diversity
- Copernicus heliocentric model challenged
Aristotles geocentric model - Heliocentric model further supported by Galileo
- Other notables, Keppler, Decartes, and Newton
establishing the laws of physics, motion and
gravity. - In essence, the scientific achievements
increasingly came to direct as well as reflect
the changing views of Europeans.
6The Path to Natural Selection
- John Ray (1627-1705)
- Defined the concept of species.
- Ray also recognized that species frequently
shared similarities with other species. - He labeled this group genus.
- However, Ray was an adherent of fixity of
species. - His 1691 publication, The Wisdom of God
Manifested in the Works of Creation, was intended
to demonstrate Gods plane in nature. - He stressed the deliberate outcome of the Grand
Design.
Ray is often referred to as the father of natural
history in Britain.
7- Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778)
- One of the leading naturalists of the 18th
century. - He is best known for developing a classification
of plants and animals - The System of Nature (Systema Naturae) in 1735.
- Binomial Nomenclature.
- He added two more categories
- Class
- Order
- His four-level system for classification became
the basis for taxonomy, the system used today. - Inclusion of humans into the classification
system into the genus Homo, and species sapiens. - While he was a believer in the fixity of species,
this view did change in his later years based on
the mounting evidence to the contrary.
Carolus Linnaeus. Portrait by Per Krafft (The
University of Uppsala Art Collections).
8- Comte de Buffon (Georges-Louis Leclerc
1707-1788) - He believed neither in the perfection of nature
nor in the idea that nature had purpose as
declared by the argument from design. - He did recognize the dynamic relationship between
the external environment and living forms. - Natural History (1749)
- repeatedly stressed the importance of change in
the universe, and he underlined the changing
nature of species. - Migrating groups would be influenced by and adapt
to the environment. - He rejected the idea that one species could give
rise to another.
Comte de Buffon, portrait by Garnerey del., P. M.
Alix sculpt. Paris, chez Drouhin.
9- Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802)- Grandfather of
Charles Darwin. Freethinking high living
physician was well known in literary circles. - Zoonomia
- evolutionary concepts were expressed in verse.
- Erasmus Darwin had expressed similar views on
natural selection. - Charles was fond of his grandfathers writings
however, it is not known how much he was
influences by them.
Erasmus Darwin, grandfather of Charles Darwin
10- Darwin's interests extended well beyond the
practice of medicine. - Dissatisfied with Linnaeus's theory of the
immutability of species and instead proposed the
gradual evolution of animals and plants. - Zoonomia or the Laws of Organic Life (1794).
- This work has been called "the first consistent
all-embracing hypothesis of evolution." - The publications of his French contemporaries,
Cuvier and Lamarck, strengthened Darwin's
position and provided the foundation for later
studies in the field, most notably for that of
Charles Darwin, grandson of Erasmus.
11- Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829)
- the 1st European scientist who attempted to
explain the evolutionary process. - Lamarck went beyond the views of Buffon by trying
to explain how species could change. - Organic forms could become altered in the face of
changing environmental circumstances.
12- Therefore, as the environment changed, so too did
the animals activity pattern. - This resulted in the increase and decrease use of
certain body parts. - As a result of use or disuse, body parts became
altered. - Physical alterations occurred as a function of
perceived bodily needs. - A trait acquired by an animal during its lifetime
can be passed on to offspring. - Inheritance of acquired characteristics or
use-disuse theory
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14- Georges Cuvier (1769-1832)
- Most vehement opponent of Lamarck.
- Specialized in vertebrate paleontology
- Introduced the concept of extinction to explain
the disappearance of animals represented by
fossils. - He never grasped the concept of nature and was a
proponent of fixity of species.
15- Instead of assuming the similarities between
certain fossil forms and living species indicated
by evolutionary relationships, Cuvier proposed a
variation of the theory know as catastrophism. - held that the earths geological features were
the results of sudden, worldwide cataclysmic
events. - To be consistent with the fossil evidence, Cuvier
proposed that destroyed regions were repopulated
by new organisms of a more modern appearance and
that there forms were the results of more recent
creation events. - This account avoided the notion of evolution
while still explaining change through time.
16- Charles Lyell (1797-1875)- He was a barrister by
training and a geologist by avocation. - He is considered to be the founder of modern
geology. - He was for many years friend and mentor to
Charles Darwin. - Principles of Geology (1830-33)
- Uniformintarianism- he argued that the geological
process observed in the present as the same as
those that occurred in the past.
17- This theory flew in the face of Cuviers
catastrophism. - Lyells theory implied immense geological time
scale. - He changed the framework within which scientists
viewed the geological past. - This the concept of deep time remains one of
Lyells most significant contribution to the
discovery of evolutionary processes.
18- Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)- an English clergyman
and economist. - An Essay on the Principle of Population
- which inspired both Darwin and Wallace in their
separate discoveries. - Malthus pointed out that if not kept in check by
limited food supplies, human population growth
could double in size every 25 years. - That is, population size increases exponentially
while food supplies remain relatively stable.