The
Miracles of Darwinism


Marcel-Paul Schützenberger
Introduction
Until his death, the mathematician and doctor
of medicine Marcel-Paul Schützenberger (1920-1996) was Professor of the Faculty of
Sciences at the University of Paris and a member of the Academy of Sciences. In 1966,
Schützenberger participated in the Wistar Symposium on mathematical objections to
neo-Darwinism. His arguments were subtle and often misunderstood by biologists. Darwin's
theory, he observed, and the interpretation of biological systems as formal objects, were
at odds insofar as randomness is known to degrade meaning in formal contexts. But
Schützenberger also argued that Darwin's theory logically required some active principle
of coordination between the typographic space of the informational macromolecules (DNA and
RNA) and the organic space of living creatures themselves -- which Darwin's theory does
not provide. In this January 1996 interview with the French science monthly La
Recherche, here published in English for the first time, he pursued these themes anew,
finding inspiration for his ideas both in the mathematical ideas that he had pioneered and
in the speculative tradition of French biological thought that stretched from Georges
Cuvier to Lucien Cuenot. M.P. Schützenberger was a man of universal curiosity and great
wit; throughout his life, he was both joyful and unafraid. The culture that he so
brilliantly represented disappears with him, of course. It was his finest invention and it
now belongs to the inventory of remembered things.
Q: What is your definition of Darwinism?
S: The most current, of course, a
position generically embodied, for example, by Richard Dawkins. The essential idea is
well-known. Evolution, Darwinists argue, is explained by the double action of chance
mutations and natural selection. The general doctrine embodies two mutually contradictory
schools -- gradualists, on the one hand, saltationists, on the other. Gradualists insist
that evolution proceeds by means of small successive changes; saltationists that it
proceeds by jumps. Richard Dawkins has come to champion radical gradualism; Stephen Jay
Gould, a no less radical version of saltationism.
Q: You are known as a mathematician rather
than a specialist in evolutionary biology...
S: Biology is, of course, not my
specialty. The participation of mathemeticians in the overall assessment of evolutionary
thought has been encouraged by the biologists themselves, if only because they presented
such an irresistible target. Richard Dawkins, for example, has been fatally attracted to
arguments that would appear to hinge on concepts drawn from mathematics and from the
computer sciences, the technical stuff imposed on innocent readers with all of his comic
authority. Mathematicians are, in any case, epistemological zealots. It is normal for them
to bring their critical scruples to the foundations of other disciplines. And finally, it
is worth observing that the great turbid wave of cybernetics has carried mathematicians
from their normal mid-ocean haunts to the far shores of evolutionary biology. There up
ahead, Rene Thom and Ilya Prigogine may be observed paddling sedately toward dry land,
members of the Santa Fe Institute thrashing in their wake. Stuart Kauffman is among them.
An interesting case, a physician half in love with mathematical logic, burdened now and
forever by having received a Papal Kiss from Murray Gell-Mann. This ecumenical movement
has endeavored to apply the concepts of mathematics to the fundamental problems of
evolution -- the interpretation of functional complexity, for example.
Q: What do you mean by functional
complexity?
S: It is impossible to grasp the
phenomenon of life without that concept, the two words each expressing a crucial and
essential idea. The laboratory biologists' normal and unforced vernacular is almost always
couched in functional terms: the function of an eye, the function of an enzyme, or a
ribosome, or the fruit fly's antennae -- their function; the concept by which such
language is animated is one perfectly adapted to reality. Physiologists see this better
than anyone else. Within their world, everything is a matter of function, the various
systems that they study -- circulatory, digestive, excretory, and the like -- all
characterized in simple, ineliminable functional terms. At the level of molecular biology,
functionality may seem to pose certain conceptual problems, perhaps because the very
notion of an organ has disappeared when biological relationships are specified in
biochemical terms; but appearances are misleading, certain functions remaining even in the
absence of an organ or organ systems. Complexity is also a crucial concept. Even among
unicellular organisms, the mechanisms involved in the separation and fusion of chromosomes
during mitosis and meiosis are processes of unbelieveable complexity and subtlety.
Organisms present themselves to us as a complex ensemble of functional interrelationships.
If one is going to explain their evolution, one must at the same time explain their
functionality and their complexity.
Q: What is it that makes functional
complexity so difficult to comprehend?
S: The evolution of living creatures
appears to require an essential ingredient, a specific form of organization. Whatever it
is, it lies beyond anything that our present knowledge of physics or chemistry might
suggest; it is a property upon which formal logic sheds absolutely no light. Whether
gradualists or saltationists, Darwinians have too simple a conception of biology, rather
like a locksmith improbably convinced that his handful of keys will open any lock.
Darwinians, for example, tend to think of the gene rather as if it were the expression of
a simple command: do this, get that done, drop that side chain. Walter Gehring's work on
the regulatory genes controlling the development of the insect eye reflects this
conception. The relevant genes may well function this way, but the story on this level is
surely incomplete, and Darwinian theory is not apt to fill in the pieces.
Q: You claim that biologists think of a
gene as a command. Could you be more specific?
S: Schematically, a gene is like a
unit of information. It has simple binary properties. When active, it is an elementary
information-theoretic unit, the cascade of gene instructions resembling the cascade
involved in specifying a recipe. Now let us return to the example of the eye. Darwinists
imagine that it requires what? A thousand or two thousand genes to assemble an eye, the
specification of the organ thus requiring one or two thousand units of information? This
is absurd! Suppose that a European firm proposes to manufacture an entirely new household
appliance in a Southeast Asian factory. And suppose that for commercial reasons, the firm
does not wish to communicate to the factory any details of the appliance's function -- how
it works, what purposes it will serve. With only a few thousand bits of information, the
factory is not going to proceed very far or very fast. A few thousand bits of information,
after all, yields only a single paragraph of text. The appliance in question is bound to
be vastly simpler than the eye; charged with its manufacture, the factory will yet need to
know the significance of the operations to which they have committed themselves in
engaging their machinery. This can be achieved only if they already have some sense of the
object's nature before they undertake to manufacture it. A considerable body of knowledge,
held in common between the European firm and its Asian factory, is necessary before
manufacturing instructions may be executed.
Q: Would you argue that the genome does
not contain the requisite information for explaining organisms?
S:Not according to the understanding
of the genome we now possess. The biological properties invoked by biologists are in this
respect quite insufficient; while biologists may understand that a gene triggers the
production of a particular protein, that knowledge -- that kind of knowledge -- does not
allow them to comprehend how one or two thousand genes suffice to direct the course of
embryonic development.
Q: You are going to be accused of
preformationism...
S: And of many other crimes. My
position is nevertheless strictly a rational one. I've formulated a problem that appears
significant to me: how is it that with so few elementary instructions, the materials of
life can fabricate objects that are so marvelously complicated and efficient? This
property with which they are endowed -- just what is its nature? Nothing within our actual
knowledge of physics and chemistry allows us intellectually to grasp it. If one starts
from an evolutionary point of view, it must be acknowledged that in one manner or another,
the earliest fish contained the capacity, and the appropriate neural wiring, to bring into
existence organs which they did not possess or even need, but which would be the common
property of their successors when they left the water for the firm ground, or for the air.
Q: You assert that, in fact, Darwinism
doesn't explain much.
S: It seems to me that the union of
chance mutation and selection has a certain descriptive value; in no case does the
description count as an explanation. Darwinism relates ecological data to the relative
abundance of species and environments. In any case, the descriptive value of Darwinian
models is pretty limited. Besides, as saltationists have indicated, the gradualist thesis
seems completely demented in light of the growth of paleontological knowledge. The
miracles of saltationism, on the other hand, cannot discharge the mystery I have
described.
Q: Let's return to natural selection.
Isn't it the case that despite everything the idea has a certain explanatory value?
S: No one could possibly deny the
general thesis that stability is a necessary condition for existence -- the real content
of the doctrine of natural selection. The outstanding application of this general
principle is Berthollet's laws in elementary chemistry. In a desert, the species that die
rapidly are those that require water the most; yet that does not explain the appearance
among the survivors of those structures whose particular features permits them to resist
aridity. The thesis of natural selection is not very powerful. Except for certain
artificial cases, we are yet unable to predict whether this or that species or this or
that variety will be favored or not as the result of changes in the environment. What we
can do is establish after the fact the effects of natural selection -- to show, for,
example that certain birds are disposed to eat this species of snails less often than
other species, perhaps because their shell is not as visible. That's ecology: very
interesting. To put it another way, natural selection is a weak instrument of proof
because the phenomena subsumed by natural selection are obvious and yet they establish
nothing from the point of view of the theory.
Q: Isn't the significant explanatory
feature of Darwinian theory the connection established between chance mutations and
natural selection?
S:With the discovery of coding, we
have come to understand that a gene is like a word composed in the DNA alphabet; such
words form the genomic text. It is that word that tells the cell to make this or that
protein. Either a given protein is structural, or a protein itself works in combination
with other signals given by the genome to fabricate yet another protein. All the
experimental results we know fall within this scheme. The following scenario then becomes
standard. A gene undergoes a mutation, one that may facilitate the reproduction of those
individuals carrying it; over time, and with respect to a specific environment, mutants
come to be statistically favored, replacing individuals lacking the requisite mutation.
Evolution could not be an accumulation of such typographical errors. Population
geneticists can study the speed with which a favorable mutation propagates itself under
these circumstances. They do this with a lot of skill, but these are academic exercises if
only because none of the parameters that they use can be empirically determined. In
addition, there are the obstacles I have already mentioned. We know the number of genes in
an organism. There are about one hundred thousand for a higher vertebrate. This we know
fairly well. But this seems grossly insufficient to explain the incredible quantity of
information needed to accomplish evolution within a given line of species.
Q: A concrete example?
S: Darwinists say that horses, which
were once mammals as large as rabbits, increased their size to escape more quickly from
predators. Within the gradualist model, one might isolate a specific trait -- increase in
body size -- and consider it to be the result of a series of typographic changes. The
explanatory effect achieved is rhetorical, imposed entirely by trick of insisting that
what counts for a herbivore is the speed of its flight when faced by a predator. Now this
may even be partially true, but there are no biological grounds that permit us to
determine that this is in fact the decisive consideration. After all, increase in body
size may well have a negative effect. Darwinists seem to me to have preserved a mechanic
vision of evolution, one that prompts them to observe merely a linear succession of causes
and effects. The idea that causes may interact with one another is now standard in
mathematical physics; it is a point that has had difficulty in penetrating the carapace of
biological thought. In fact, within the quasi-totality of observable phenomena, local
changes interact in a dramatic fashion; after all, there is hardly an issue of La
Recherche that does not contain an allusion to the Butterfly Effect. Information theory is
precisely the domain that sharpens our intuitions about these phenomena. A typographical
change in a computer program does not change it just a little. It wipes the program out,
purely and simply. It is the same with a telephone number. If I intend to call a
correspondent by telephone, it doesn't much matter if I am fooled by one, two, three or
eight figures in his number.
Q: You accept the idea that biological
mutations genuinely have the character of typographical errors?
S: Yes, in the sense that one base is
a template for another, one codon for another, but at the level of biochemical activity,
one is no longer able properly to speak of typography. There is an entire grammar for the
formation of proteins in three dimensions, one that we understand poorly. We do not have
at our disposal physical or chemical rules permitting us to construct a mapping from
typographical mutations or modifications to biologically effective structures. To return
to the example of the eye: a few thousand genes are needed for its fabrication, but each
in isolation signifies nothing. What is significant is the combination of their
interactions. These cascading interactions, with their feedback loops, express an
organization whose complexity we do not know how to analyze . It is possible we may be
able to do so in the future, but there is no doubt that we are unable to do so now.
Gehring has recently discovered a segment of DNA which is both involved in the development
of the vertebrate eye and which can induce the development of an eye in the wing of a
butterfly. His work comprises a demonstration of something utterly astonishing, but not an
explanation.
Q:But Dawkins, for example, believes in
the possibility of a cumulative process.
S: Dawkins believes in an effect that
he calls "the cumulative selection of beneficial mutations." To support his
thesis, he resorts to a metaphor introduced by the mathematician Emile Borel -- that of a
monkey typing by chance and in the end producing a work of literature. It is a metaphor, I
regret to say, embraced by Francis Crick, the co-discoverer of the double helix. Dawkins
has his computer write a series of thirty letters, these corresponding to the number of
letters in a verse by Shakespeare. He then proceeds to simulate the Darwinian mechanism of
chance mutations and selection. His imaginary monkey types and retypes the same letters,
the computer successively choosing the phrase that most resembles the target verse. By
means of cumulative selection, the monkey reaches its target in forty or sixty
generations.
Q: But you don't believe that a monkey
typing on a typewriter, even aided by a computer...
S:This demonstration is a
trompe-l'oeil, and what is more, Dawkins doesn't describe precisely how it proceeds. At
the beginning of the exercise, randomly generated phrases appear rapidly to approach the
target; the closer the approach, the more the process begins to slow. It is the action of
mutations in the wrong direction that pulls things backward. In fact, a simple argument
shows that unless the numerical parameters are chosen deliberately, the progression begins
to bog down completely.
Q:You would say that the model of
cumulative selection, imagined by Dawkins, is out of touch with palpable biological
realities?
S: Exactly. Dawkins's model lays
entirely to the side the triple problems of complexity, functionality, and their
interaction.
Q: You are a mathematician. Suppose that
you try, despite your reservations, to formalize the concept of functional complexity...
S: I would appeal to a notion banned
by the scientific community, but one understood perfectly by everyone else -- that of a
goal. As a computer scientist, I could express this in the following way. One constructs a
space within which one of the coordinates serves in effect as the thread of Ariane,
guiding the trajectory toward the goal. Once the space is constructed, the system evolves
in a mechanical way toward its goal. But look, the construction of the relevant space
cannot proceed until a preliminary analysis has been carried out, one in which the set of
all possible trajectories is assessed, this together with an estimation of their average
distance from the specified goal. The preliminary analysis is beyond the reach of
empirical study. It presupposes -- the same word that seems to recur in theoretical
biology -- that the biologist (or computer scientist) know the totality of the situation,
the properties of the ensemble of trajectories. In terms of mathematical logic, the nature
of this space is entirely enigmatic. Nonetheless, it is important to remember that the
conceptual problems we face, life has entirely solved; the systems embodied in living
creatures are entirely successful in reaching their goals. The trick involved in Dawkin's
somewhat sheepish example proceeds via the surreptitious introduction of a relevant space.
His computer program calculates from a random phrase to a target, a calculation
corresponding to nothing in biological reality. The function that he employs flatters the
imagination, however, because it has that property of apparent simplicity that elicits
naïve approval. In biological reality, the space of even the simplest function has a
complexity that defies understanding, and indeed, defies any and all calculations.
Q: Even when they dissent from Darwin, the
saltationists are more moderate: they don't pretend to hold the key that would permit them
to explain evolution...
S: Before we discuss the
saltationists, however, I must say a word about the Japanese biologist Mooto Kimura. He
has shown that the majority of mutations are neutral, without any selective effect. For
Darwinians upholding the central Darwinian thesis, this is embarrassing... The
saltationist view, revived by Stephen Jay Gould, in the end represents an idea due to
Richard Goldschmidt. In 1940 or so, he postulated the existence of very intense mutations,
no doubt involving hundreds of genes, and taking place rapidly, in less than one thousand
generations, thus below the threshold of resolution of paleontology. Curiously enough,
Gould does not seem concerned to preserve the union of chance mutations and selection. The
saltationists run afoul of two types of criticism. On the one hand, the functionality of
their supposed macromutations is inexplicable within the framework of molecular biology.
On the other hand, Gould ignores in silence the great trends in biology, such as the
increasing complexity of the nervous system. He imagines that the success of new, more
sophisticated species, such as the mammals, is a contingent phenomenon. He is not in a
position to offer an account of the essential movement of evolution, or at the least, an
account of its main trajectories. The saltationists are thus reduced to invoking two types
of miracles: macromutations, and the great trajectories of evolution.
Q: In what sense are you employing the
word 'miracle'?
S:A miracle is an event that should
appear impossible to a Darwinian in view of its ultra-cosmological improbability within
the framework of his own theory. Now speaking of macromutations, let me observe that to
generate a proper elephant, it will not suffice suddenly to endow it with a full-grown
trunk. As the trunk is being organized, a different but complementary system -- the
cerebellum -- must be modified in order to establish a place for the ensemble of wiring
that the elephant will require to use his trunk. These macromutations must be coordinated
by a system of genes in embryogenesis. If one considers the history of evolution, we must
postulate thousands of miracles; miracles, in fact, without end. No more than the
gradualists, the saltationists are unable to provide an account of those miracles. The
second category of miracles are directional, offering instruction to the great
evolutionary progressions and trends -- the elaboration of the nervous system, of course,
but the internalization of the reproductive process as well, and the appearance of bone,
the emergence of ears, the enrichment of various functional relationships, and so on. Each
is a series of miracles, whose accumulation has the effect of increasing the complexity
and efficiency of various organisms. From this point of view, the notion of bricolage
[tinkering], introduced by Francois Jacob, involves a fine turn of phrase, but one
concealing an utter absence of explanation.
Q: The appearance of human beings -- is
that a miracle, in the sense you mean?
S: Naturally. And here it does seem
that there are voices among contemporary biologists -- I mean voices other than mine --
who might cast doubt on the Darwinian paradigm that has dominated discussion for the past
twenty years. Gradualists and saltationists alike are completely incapable of giving a
convincing explanation of the quasi-simultaneous emergence of a number of biological
systems that distinguish human beings from the higher primates: bipedalism, with the
concomitant modification of the pelvis, and, without a doubt, the cerebellum, a much more
dexterous hand, with fingerprints conferring an especially fine tactile sense; the
modifications of the pharynx which permits phonation; the modification of the central
nervous system, notably at the level of the temporal lobes, permitting the specific
recognition of speech. From the point of view of embryogenesis, these anatomical systems
are completely different from one another. Each modification constitutes a gift, a bequest
from a primate family to its descendants. It is astonishing that these gifts should have
developed simultaneously. Some biologists speak of a predisposition of the genome. Can
anyone actually recover the predisposition, supposing that it actually existed? Was it
present in the first of the fish? The reality is that we are confronted with total
conceptual bankruptcy.
Q:You mentioned the Santa Fe school
earlier in our discussion. Do appeals to such notions as chaos...
S:I should have alluded to a
succession of highly competent people who have discovered a number of poetic but
essentially hollow forms of expression. I am referring here to the noisy crowd collected
under the rubric of cybernetics; and beyond, there lie the dissipative structures of
Prigogine, or the systems of Varela, or, moving to the present, Stuart Kauffman's edge of
chaos -- an organized form of inanity that is certain soon to make its way to France. The
Santa Fe school takes complexity to apply to absolutely everything. They draw their
representative examples from certain chemical reactions, the pattern of the sea coast,
atmosphere turbulence, or the structure of a chain of mountains. The complexity of these
structures is certainly considerable, but in comparison with the living world, they
exhibit in every case an impoverished form of organization, one that is strictly
non-functional. No algorithm allows us to understand the complexity of living creatures,
this despite these examples, which owe their initial plausibility to the assumption that
the physico-chemical world exhibits functional properties that in reality it does not
possess.
Q: Should one take your position as a
statement of resignation, an appeal to have greater modesty, or something else altogether?
S: Speaking ironically, I might say
that all we can hear at the present time is the great anthropic hymnal, with even a number
of mathematically sophisticated scholars keeping time as the great hymn is intoned by
tapping their feet. The rest of us should, of course, practice a certain suspension of
judgment.
Copyright © 1996 Marcel-Paul
Schützenberger. All rights reserved. International copyright secured.
File Date: 11.14.96
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