"Lamarkism" is a term often attached to a seemingly discredited idea in evolutionary biology: that one organism could acquire characteristics (e.g., becoming stronger through exercise) that would then be inherited by its descendants. This is a different story than the one ultimately told by the modern synthesis of evolutionary biology, according to which inheritance passes through our genome (which doesn't know that we've been working out). In her book The Power of Life: The Invention of Biology and the Revolutionary Science of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, historian of science Jessica Riskin argues that this picture is too simple, and that Lamarck made contributions we should still pay attention to: most significantly, the idea that organisms have a creative agency of their own, in addition to the influences of the outside world.
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Jessica Riskin received her Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley. She is currently the Frances and Charles Field Professor of History at Stanford University. Among her awards are the Patrick Suppes Prize in the History of Science and the J. Russell Major Award for French history. Her books include The Restless Clock and Genesis Redux, and she is a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books.
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0:00:00.4 Sean Carroll: Hello everyone, welcome to the Mindscape podcast. I'm your host, Sean Carroll. There's kind of a pattern that we each individually go through when we learn something about science, some aspect of how the natural world works. First, we start by looking at the world, and we know that it looks very complicated. Later, we learn that there's this brilliant scientific insight that actually simplifies our description of the world. And we're very happy because we have this compact, austere, powerful formalism that can explain so much. And then, we realize that actually, that really simple, powerful formalism gets complicated a little bit, either intrinsically complicated when we want to include more things, or just complicated because applying it to the real world is a little bit trickier than we originally thought.
0:00:51.0 SC: So Newtonian mechanics, was an enormous simplification. If you read about Aristotle, or other ways of thinking about physics back in the day, there was a lot going on. It wasn't clear what was biology, what was physics, et cetera. And then through the work of many, many generations of smart people, we learned to start by ignoring air resistance and friction. And Galileo showed us how to do these experiments to really isolate the simple essence of it. And we culminated in Newtonian mechanics, in an extraordinarily powerful theory of the world. And then we learn later, when we, as individuals, learn about Newtonian mechanics, it gets complicated because there is friction in the real world, and there is quantum mechanics, and relativity, and things like that.
0:01:39.8 SC: So this pattern of enormous complexity, being simplified, and then maybe a little bit complicated again, is true both for individuals learning science, but also for science as a field learning about the world. Another aspect besides physics is, of course, biology, evolutionary biology. There was a lot of work done for thousands of years, in thinking about the different kinds of species that existed, eventually realizing that they changed over time. They evolved, in the broadest possible sense. And then Darwin, of course, made a huge leap forward with natural selection. And there was ultimately, in the 20th century, the modern synthesis, where we glued together modern genetics with Darwinian natural selection, and we really had an extraordinarily powerful view of the nature and origin of species. But then things became complicated again. And these days, the frontier work is in pointing out that our individual genetic inheritance is not just the specific genome that we get in the nuclei of our cells from the DNA that we inherit from our parents, but also there are epigenetic factors. There are chemicals that work to express certain genes rather than others. We inherit mitochondrial DNA, as well as the nuclear DNA. We inherit aspects of our microbiome from our mothers, and things like that. And not to mention that there are influences of culture on the biology that we have, because certain genes are going to be passed down and certain ones are not. So we're making the story a little bit more complicated again.
0:03:21.4 SC: And at that moment when we were simplifying it the most in evolutionary biology, it was interesting and fun to contrast the view that we had of evolutionary biology, with what could have been and was shown to be wrong. And in this case, one of the villains of the conventional story, was Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, who was a predecessor of Darwin, who came up with a theory of evolution, but one that was not based on random mutation and sexual selection... And sexual mixing, I should say, of your genetic inheritance, but rather inheritance of acquired characteristics. So a giraffe, in Lamarck's theory, would have a neck growing longer and longer because generations of giraffes would be straining to reach the leaves on the tops of the trees. And from all that straining, not only would the individual giraffe get a longer neck, but it would be able to pass down that longer neck to its descendants. This story from Lamarck was not part of the modern synthesis of Darwinian natural selection, where you just had a genome, it was just randomly mixed up by mutation and, of course, father-mother sexual mixing and things like that. It was not an effort that went into creating the features of future generations. So that was laughed at, that Lamarckian idea.
0:04:54.7 SC: Today's guest, Jessica Riskin, is a historian of science. And she wants to, kind of, rehabilitate Lamarck a little bit. Not all the way, certainly not overturning anything Darwin said and replacing it with what Lamarck said. But she points out that Darwin himself really agreed with many of Lamarck's ideas. And many of these very recent modifications of the standard Darwinian synthesis, have a certain Lamarckian flavor. But I think that what she's mostly after is a shift of emphasis, not just specific scientific ideas. Lamarck was a champion of the idea that organisms, living beings, were not designed, by either an intelligent designer, or just by the external forces of nature, but that inside individual organisms, the organisms themselves played a role in creating who they were, and maybe even who their [0:05:49.4] ____ ancestors would be. I think it's that sort of change of emphasis, that Jessica is more about than anything else. And the wonderful story with all the historical anecdotes and all the biographical details is told in her new book called, 'The Power of Life: The Invention of Biology and the Revolutionary Science of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck.' And it has implications not just for this particular historical event, but for how we think about how science is done, and how we think about how we human beings live in the broader natural world. So let's go.
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0:06:39.7 SC: Jessica Riskin, welcome to the Mindscape podcast.
0:06:41.1 Jessica Riskin: Thank you very much. Thank you for having me.
0:06:43.2 SC: Now, you've written a book, 'The Power of Life,' about a controversial figure in the history of biology. But I thought that it would be fun to actually start talking about a previous book you've written, that both overlaps even more obviously with my own interests, but also leads into your second book. So the first book was, 'The Restless Clock: A History of the Centuries-Long Argument Over What Makes Living Things Tick.' All those words sound great to me and I love them, but maybe why don't you try to explain to the audience what the book was about?
0:07:15.9 JR: Sure. Yes. And in fact, the Lamarck book comes directly out of that earlier book. So, 'The Restless Clock,' was really about a struggle that I see as having taken place in the life sciences, in the history of biology, between two competing models of a living being. According to one model, a living being is a kind of designed machine that has been designed in a certain way, and functions in that way. It's the object of outside forces. In the first instance, in the 17th century, those outside forces were a designer god. And in the modern neo-Darwinist version of it, the outside forces are natural selection. But in either case, the organism is this kind of machine that is fairly passive. The competing tradition, is one that I think of as active mechanism, in which the organism is itself self-making and self-transforming, and constantly redesigning itself, rather than being just acted upon from outside. And so, 'The Restless Clock,' traces the struggle between those two competing models of a living being, from the 17th century, pretty much up to the present, anyway, up through the 20th century. And when I got to the end of writing that book, I realized that Lamarck should have been huge in that book because he really is the hero of the active mechanist tradition. He really is the hero, the champion of the idea of the creative agency of living organisms. And so I got to the end... He's in there a little bit, but I was in the final stages of writing that book, and I just thought, "This book should have been about Lamarck." But I had taken so long writing the book...
0:09:09.6 SC: No. You gotta get it out.
0:09:11.7 JR: I can't start over again. I can't go back and rewrite this book. And so then I just thought, "Oh, well, I'll give him his own book. I'll just have to give him his own book." So that's how I got from...
0:09:22.7 SC: That's how you get two books out of the process. That's how a good author thinks. That's great. So I think it's fascinating how our metaphors for ourselves, and for life, and whatever, are always responding to the culture around us. Basically, you seem to be saying that in the beginning of the Enlightenment, when machines and automata first came on the scene, instantly a certain segment of people said, "Oh, we're like that," and a certain other set of people resisted a little bit.
0:09:53.1 JR: Yeah, that's right. One of the things, one of the kind of discoveries of working on, 'The Restless Clock,' book is that there were automatic machines, automata, and hydraulic organs, and clocks, and all kinds of things all around the early modern European world, in churches, and in wealthy estates and things. And so part of the fun of writing that book was to go around. And I actually went and visited some of these machines. I went to Salzburg, and I saw these extraordinary automata that would... Gargoyles that would stick out their tongue, and a chair that you would sit in and it would grab you, and stuff like that. I actually went there with my son, who is now... This was a while ago, so he was a little boy at the time, and he was completely enthralled by this. And I realized that these machines have been entertaining small children and other people for centuries. And so these machines were everywhere. And people did indeed, in the 17th century, start trying to think.
0:10:58.7 JR: So Descartes... The French philosopher Descartes, lived for a time near the French royal palace at Saint-Germain-en-Laye. And there were lots of these grottoes, hydraulic grottoes, they were arranged in this neo-Gothic way. And so he probably... I don't know. We don't know. He probably visited them, and he describes them in his writing. And Descartes, of course, is the great theorist of living bodies as machinery. So yeah, people were trying to think in these terms about what a living being, an animal or a human could be. And I'll just add one more thing, which is that I had a PhD student a few years ago, now teaching at St. John's College, Halley Barnet his name is. He did a beautiful dissertation, which I hope is on its way into being published as a book, which is called, 'Homo Musicus.' And it's about how people in the 18th century, used musical instruments as models of living beings. In the way that we use information machinery, we use computers, they used clavichords, and harpsichords, and cellos, vibrating strings, and all of that. So yes, exactly. We draw on the machines or the models that are around us.
0:12:14.2 SC: So don't be disturbed about the dog barking in the background. The audience loves that. We're not going to edit that out. We're going to leave that in there.
0:12:21.6 JR: Oh, sorry. Yeah. My dog.
0:12:23.7 SC: But so... I mean, maybe I'm wrong...
0:12:24.8 JR: But let me just say, I could put her in the car, though. If...
0:12:27.6 SC: No, no, no, that would be... We love the dog in the... Whatever. It adds a little bit of reality to it. That's how we know you're not AI. Actually, it's probably not, because you could probably trick that into the AI. But maybe I'm wrong about when these kinds of machines did appear on the scene. Were they around before the 17th century, similar kinds of machines?
0:12:49.5 JR: Mechanical clocks had been around for some centuries before the 17th century. They date back to the High Middle Ages, I think 13th, 14th century, maybe 14th century. And then another sort of important development was the camshaft, a barrel with pegs sticking out of it. Like you see in a music box, you see a miniature version of that, a little barrel with pins that trigger a sequence of motions. The pegs trigger levers, that attach to other things. And so you see some of these quite elaborate automata governed, programmed by camshafts in the early 17th century, turn of the 16th to 17th century. There are some quite extraordinary... I have some beautiful designs in there. For example, a host of birds, like a bunch of little figures of birds that are flittering and twittering, and then an owl that is pivoting towards them. And the whole thing, you see the design for it, this is a design by a French engineer named, Isaac de Caus. And you see, he has a drawing of this. You see the camshaft turning, and the pegs sticking out of it, and triggering valves in a set of pipes. And the whole thing is being run by a water wheel. And so as the camshaft is turning, the birds are twittering, the owl is turning towards them. When he faces the birds, the mechanism is braked, so they freeze. And as he turns away again, they start fluttering and twittering. So these are the programming devices of the early modern period, camshafts. And there's a direct line of development from those, to automatic looms, which are mid-18th century. The first designs for automatic looms that the cams triggered, the raising and lowering of warp threads... Or is it the woof? I guess it's... I can't remember which is the warp and which is the...
0:14:50.2 SC: I'm not going to provide any help on this one.
0:14:52.2 JR: And to punch cards. The first punch cards were in automatic looms. And then Charles Babbage, the early 19th century English mathematician and inventor, designed his mechanical calculating engines, the analytical engine and the difference engine, on the model of the automatic looms. And so you can see this kind of continuous line of development, from early modern camshafts, through automatic looms, through punch cards, through, of course, modern computing.
0:15:22.6 SC: And am I right in my wild speculation that this technological development did influence the idea that people could be understood along similar lines as machines?
0:15:33.1 JR: I think absolutely, yeah. I think... I'll go back to Descartes, who, again, he was the kind of major theorist of the idea that you could understand living beings in the way that you understand clockwork, artificial mechanical devices. And I think, yes, I mean, he looked around himself and he tells stories of visiting these hydraulic grottoes where you step into the grotto and there's a figure of a Diana, or some goddess, who flees when you step in. The fact that the automata seem to respond to one another and to visitors, to him... He really emphasizes that they seem like they're engaging and responding.
0:16:19.7 SC: Right.
0:16:20.6 JR: And so, it's not that he thought that animals or people genuinely were clockwork, but that you could try to understand animal and human machinery in comparable terms, in terms of material parts. And I think the fact that he saw these machines all, around certainly encouraged that.
0:16:43.4 SC: And so, try to make it clear for us what the other option is. Look, I'm a physicist at heart. I understand when you say, "Okay, there's machines, and they're made of pieces, and they obey laws, and they come together to make a bigger thing." What is the, sort of, more romantic, agentic alternative to that?
0:17:04.3 JR: Well, first of all, I can start with the older tradition. I mean, so traditionally, according to an Aristotelian picture of living things, Aristotle described three different kinds of souls. So he said that plants have a vegetative soul that causes them to grow. Animals have a vegetative soul and a sensitive soul that causes them to grow and sense. And then people have a vegetative soul, a sensitive soul, and a rational soul so that they can grow, they can sense, and they can reason. And Descartes got rid of two of the three souls. He said, really, there's no such thing as an animal... A vegetative soul, or a sensitive soul. Those are just... He says, basically, you can call them souls if you want, but I see those as substances. And the only soul that he retained was the rational soul in human beings. And then in the 18th century, very much more thoroughgoing materialists, not dualists like Descartes, but people like the French philosopher La Mettrie or Diderot, a lot of mid 18th century French people got rid of the rational soul. They basically said, "Okay, you took it some of the way. Let's now take it the rest of the way and get rid of the rational soul too." Everything should be describable in terms of moving parts.
0:18:28.2 JR: But then, there are various different possibilities for these moving parts. Have they been put together by some outside force, and they just tick, tick, tick, tick, function the way a clockmaker makes a clock? Or are they themselves changing, and transforming, and recreating themselves? And how did they come to be in this extraordinary organization that is a living thing? Did it happen all at once by someone arranging them, or did they arrange themselves? And so that's the big conflict, the big struggle. And you have, in this period, the argument from design. This is a kind of 17th century... The first people who made the argument from design, people like John Ray, the English theologian, Robert Boyle, English chemist, physicist, and theologian. It's a 17th century idea. And what they said was you can demonstrate the existence of a kind of designer God, rational, omnipotent being, from the evidence of mechanical design in nature. And so they got very, very interested in these kind of very minute considerations of mechanisms, like the mechanism of the eye, or an insect. Tiny, minute investigations of the appearance of design in nature.
0:19:51.2 JR: And that tradition culminated with William Paley, in the beginning of the 19th century, who famously said... His very famous version of the argument from design is if you're crossing a heath and your foot hits a rock, you might think, "well, that rock just has always been there. Who knows how that got there?" But if your foot hits a watch, you know that there has to be a watchmaker somewhere around. That was his version. But what's interesting about that, is that it assumes passivity on the part of the watch, right? I mean, it assumes it's just kind of lying there like a rock to be kicked aside. What if it yelped and scuttled away? That would be a very different matter. Then you might not necessarily think there's a watchmaker. You might think somehow that watch got there on its own volition, right? And so that's the competing model that culminates with Lamarck, is the idea that... And already, people like the ones I mentioned, La Mettrie, and Diderot, and other kind of mid 18th century Frenchmen who were very rigorous naturalizers and kind of materialists, they already had been trying to imagine a way that these living mechanisms could have come to be gradually, over time, in an internal self-made way, not by having an order imposed from the outside, but by gradually transforming over many, many, many generations. They began also, to think their way into deep time, this kind of deep abyss of time. And Lamarck comes at the end of that active mechanist tradition of trying to imagine how these living machines could have made themselves.
0:21:22.6 SC: I think that's super helpful, because I think I did misunderstand a little bit the distinction. It's hard to get out of one's own location in space and time, and I sort of associate a kind of mechanistic, naturalistic, physicalist point of view with one of your options, and a more romantic, theological, magical point of view with the other one. But you're making the point... And I think it's completely true historically... That it was the people who thought of living beings as machines, that were more theological about it, that were using that to prove the existence of God.
0:21:58.0 JR: Exactly. Oh, I'm so glad you said that. That's exactly my point. Right, I think Lamarck and the others in his tradition get a reputation for being sort of woo-woo, mystical, and nothing could be farther from the truth. It's the exact opposite. These are the people who wanted to not make any appeal to a supernatural God. And so they were trying to imagine how it could happen from within, without appeal to a supernatural God. And it was the kind of very mechanist, engineer kind of model... People who were advocating that kind of engineering model of a way of studying living machinery, those were the people who... That tradition emerged from the argument from design. It came out of a theology. And so the way I sort of think of it shorthand, is that I think that Richard Dawkins, ironically, is the heir to William Paley. He doesn't see it that way, but I think that's really the case.
0:23:02.1 SC: Well, and I guess if you're going to... It does make sense in retrospect, right? Because you're saying that if you really analogize living beings to machines, machines in our experiences are designed by somebody outside. And so that kind of goes hand in hand. And if the real distinction is, are the changes, and evolution, and agency, coming from within us or from outside, then it's the external point of view that's gonna go along both with the machine metaphor, and with the argument from design.
0:23:36.0 JR: Yeah, exactly. Exactly. It's interesting that Charles Darwin, he kind of later in life, reminisced about having... When he was a student at Cambridge, he memorized Paley. He said he could basically recite Paley from memory, and you can sort of hear it in his prose. He's a very, very beautiful, I think, a beautiful writer, Charles Darwin. A really beautiful kind of stylist of the English language. But it kind of resonates, it echoes a little bit, Paley. And yet he said, "So I'm basically taking Paley and getting rid of God, and replacing God with natural selection." I mean, Darwin didn't put it that way. I should hasten to say, he was very, very careful always to tell people that they don't have to choose between God and Darwin, that the two are compatible. But nevertheless, I think his idea was that he could put natural selection in the spot where Paley had God. And the problem with that is that the model of what a living thing is, sort of has a kind of supernaturalism built into it. If you really think that the organism is totally passive, then it suggests that agency is somewhere else. It kind of outsources it to an external God.
0:24:52.1 JR: But another thing I wanted to emphasize is that Darwin didn't fully adopt that model. He partly adopted Paley's model, with natural selection playing the role of God. But he also adopted Lamarck's model. And that's something that I think cannot be emphasized enough, because everybody nowadays represents them as opposites. But Darwin was a Lamarckian in a very important sense. He adopted Lamarck's idea of what we now call, the inheritance of acquired characteristics, the idea that an organism, a living being, changes itself through its behaviors in teeny, tiny infinitesimal ways. Then those are inherited by its offspring. And then you add together those infinitesimal changes over thousands of generations, and you get like the giraffe's long neck. Darwin never questioned that. It's in every edition of, 'The Origin of Species.' He called it the inherited effects of use and disuse, and it's in every edition of, 'The Origin of Species,' it's in, 'The Descent of Man,' it's in everything he ever wrote. He believed that. And so he had... I see him as very torn between the Paley passive model, and the Lamarck active model, and he's torn and struggling with that problem.
0:25:58.7 SC: Good. So the real distinction, in some sense, that you want to draw... I'm just trying to get it into my head because I am very embedded in these modern debates... Is the self-creation of who you are, by the organisms, not just being shaped by external forces. In the first book, in, 'The Restless Clock.'
0:26:18.7 JR: Yeah, that's right. 'The Restless Clock,' is really about that struggle between active and passive mechanism, between those two models of what a living being is. And it seems to me that the neo-Darwinist tradition... Not Darwin himself... But the neo-Darwinist tradition, as I say, are the heirs to Paley. They carry on that passive model. And Lamarck, sort of the active mechanist model, has been largely banished from mainstream science for over a 100 years. And I think there are really interesting reasons for that. There's a politics to it. In the first instance, in the later 19th century, I think it had to do with leaving room for an omnipotent God, sort of out there behind the scenes. So Darwin was acutely conscious that Lamarckism had this ill odor of radicalism, and revolution, regicide, atheism, because Lamarck had developed his theories during the French Revolution and published them sort of in the midst of all of that. And actually, Charles Darwin's own grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, had come up with similar ideas. He was a doctor and a naturalist, Erasmus Darwin, and he had a similar idea to Lamarck's, of transformation of living forms from generation to generation.
0:27:46.2 JR: But he didn't develop it into a systematic theory the way Lamarck did. But Erasmus Darwin also, he was a poet. He expressed a lot of his ideas in poetry. He was a romantic, and he was a political radical. He was very admiring of the French revolutionaries. And so, Charles Darwin had this kind of... He was a little embarrassed, he was a little worried about all of this radical, romantic, dangerous aura to his ideas. And so he was very careful, as I say, to insist that you didn't have to choose between God and Darwin. But I think as you move through the 19th century, increasingly, Darwin's followers have the idea that if they want for Darwinism and evolutionary theory to really persuade people, and be very successful, that they have to do something about this problem. They have to make it seem sober, and not dangerous in this way. And so they eradicated all traces of Lamarckian inheritance, what Darwin called the inherited effects of use and disuse. His followers got rid of that very adamantly, especially a German Darwinist evolutionist named, August Weismann. And he carried out these experiments that have become very famous that you may have heard of with mice. Do you know Weismann's mouse experiments?
0:29:08.8 SC: Let's assume I do not know that one. I know it because I looked in your book, but tell me what it is.
0:29:13.1 JR: Yeah. So he chopped the tails off mice. He did this for several generations, and he showed that the offspring of the mice had perfectly normal tails. He himself knew that this was really not a refutation of Lamarck or Darwin, because neither of them had said that amputations were inherited. Both of them had believed that organisms transform themselves from within by their habits, by their behaviors, not that an amputation would be inherited. It's a very different thing.
0:29:44.6 SC: That'd be a weird one. Yeah.
0:29:45.5 JR: And Weismann knew that perfectly well, and he even said that. But he said, "This will refute the popular version of belief in inheritance of acquired characteristics." It was really sort of a gimmick, but it was extraordinarily powerful. And people still have that in biology textbooks as a refutation of Lamarckian inheritance. And so, from the end of the 19th century, turn of the 20th century, you see a neo-Darwinist theory emerge in which Lamarckian inheritance is absolutely banished. There's no inheritance of acquired characteristics, and there's a lot of insistence on the absolute and utter passivity of the organism. And people actually kind of make a slide from evolutionary passivity to behavioral passivity. You begin to see that animals are just the vehicles of their... Well, we haven't gotten to genes until the middle of the 20th century, but that kind of slide from evolutionary to behavioral passivity is already taking place. And then by the time you get to the mid-20th century, it's that animals are just the vehicles of their genes.
0:30:48.2 SC: Well, I mean, your new book, 'The Power of Life,' is a combination of science, and history, and biography. So I did want a chance to give you a chance to do the biography part. I mean, tell us about this guy, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. Who is he? What if you've never heard of him before? Where was he born? What did he do?
0:31:05.7 JR: Okay. Yes. Thank you. So he was born in 1744 in Picardy in northern France. And he was the 11th and youngest child, and 4th son of a family from the military nobility. But they were sort of a family... Their funds were dwindling already. And by the time they got around to Lamarck, they had already spent all of their money on his older brothers' military careers. It's very expensive to launch a military career. And so Lamarck had to be, at age 11, sent off to study for the priesthood. And he really hated that idea. He didn't want to be a priest. And when his father died a few years later, he said, "That's it, I won't be a priest," and he went galloping off on one of his mother's old horses to join a regiment that was fighting in the Seven Years' War in Central Europe. Then he was a soldier for a while. Then he had to leave the military. So Georges Cuvier, who was Lamarck's archenemy, also, funny story, had the job of writing his eulogy, so-called eulogy. It's the worst, nastiest, meanest eulogy you've ever seen. But he kind of nastily insinuated that Lamarck had been lifted by the head by one of his fellow soldiers. They were horsing around. Anyway, he had some kind of neck injury, and so he left the military. Meanwhile, he had fallen in love with wildflowers. His regiment had been garrisoned in Provence, and he had fallen in love with wildflowers, and decided he wanted to be a botanist. And so off he went to Paris to be a botanist. And for a while, he was a botanist. Shall I keep going?
0:32:42.0 SC: Oh, yes. I love it.
0:32:44.3 JR: So he was studying botany in Paris. But also he was living in a garret apartment right up under the roof, poor student. And so all he could see were clouds. And so he started also studying clouds, and he became the first person to name the clouds, to categorize. He was a very tidy sort of guy. He liked to taxonomize. He ended up naming over 6,000 species of animals, invertebrates, and other living species. But he also taxonomized the clouds and named them, and ultimately set up the first government weather bureau. He developed a science of meteorology and set up the first government weather bureau. But where was I? So he was studying botany, and he caught the interest of Georges Buffon, who was an extraordinarily prolific naturalist and well-connected guy who was the director of the Royal Botanical Garden, and made Lamarck his protege. And that was all very excellent for a while until... But then in 1788, Buffon died. 1789 was the Revolution. Everything was thrown into total turmoil. Lamarck helped to shepherd the garden through the revolution, and even to build a new Museum of Natural History in the heart of it. But when it came time to give professorships in this new Museum of Natural History, he was not allowed to have a botany professorship because the botanists who were already in place in the garden didn't want him to. And so in the end, he had to take the lowliest of the zoology professorships, which was the professorship in insects and worms. He became professor of insects and worms in the garden. And I initially wanted to call my book, The Professor of Insects and Worms, because I thought that would be a...
0:34:26.6 SC: That's a good title.
0:34:28.8 JR: But my editor didn't like that title.
0:34:29.7 SC: I think your title is better than the one... I mean, the title you have now is fine. But, A Professor of Insects and Worms...
0:34:36.0 JR: Would have been better?
0:34:37.5 SC: Is even better, I think. Because it really struck me when I was leafing through the book, I suppose we have a similar thing now with very highly specialized microbiology professors or whatever. But back then, you could be like the professor of mollusks, or something like that. It was just a wonderful set of specializations that people could have.
0:34:56.8 JR: Yeah. Actually, he renamed it. So he was professor of insects and worms, which was Linnaeus's ginormous category of all insects and worms, but it included mollusks, interestingly. And mollusks were worms according to that. And it was Lamarck who coined the term invertebrates. That was his coinage, and so he renamed his designated creatures.
0:35:22.1 SC: Invertebrate biology, sounds better than professor of insects and worms. Okay. But this is all... So this is... By the end of the French Revolution, we've gotten up to now.
0:35:32.1 JR: We are... Yes, we are sort of... Well, at the moment when he became professor of insects and worms, it was right embroiled in the midst of the French Revolution. And then he survived that, and Napoleon came in and made himself emperor, et cetera. And Napoleon hated Lamarck. He was really... He loathed Lamarck and Lamarck's science. He was the one who shut down Lamarck's weather bureau, and really tried to undermine him at every turn. There's a story told by the astronomer...so this is in your line... François Arago. He was a young man at the time that this story took place, but he told the story that in 1809, when Lamarck published his magnum opus, the, 'Philosophie Zoologique,' the zoological philosophy, where he presents his theory of evolution for the first time to the world, that he and Arago were among all of the members of the National Institute waiting nervously in a salon of the Tuileries Palace, waiting to present their work to Napoleon. And Napoleon finally came sweeping in, and marched up to Arago and said, "You're very young. What's your name?" And Arago had a kind of awkward exchange where everybody was trying to answer for him. And then he turned to Lamarck and said, "What is that you're holding?" And he snatched Lamarck's book. And he kind of thrust it into the hands of an aide and said, "This is basically nonsense. Your work is all nonsense." And poor Lamarck was reduced to tears of humiliation. So famously, he had to weather the scorn and loathing of Napoleon, and all of Napoleon's inner circle, Cuvier and everybody.
0:37:16.1 SC: Was that story, the first interaction between them? My question is, why does the Emperor of France keep track of the professor of insects and worms? That doesn't seem to be the kind of thing going on now.
0:37:27.6 JR: Oh, but he was. He was very interested in science and very closely... So it wouldn't have been their first exchange, I don't think. I mean, he knew... So Napoleon had this close kind of inner circle of scientists, who included Georges Cuvier, who was the paleontologist, and Laplace, the astronomer and mathematician, Laplace, and Fourcroy, the chemist. And they, all of them, hated Lamarck. And so this was already in full swing. And there are various reasons for that. I mean, I think one thing is that Cuvier was a devout Lutheran. He rejected transformism, evolution. He absolutely rejected it. Another reason is that Napoleon certainly didn't like this participatory meteorological program. He was not into participatory. Napoleon was into top-down.
0:38:21.8 SC: Not into democracy. Right. Yeah.
0:38:24.2 JR: And then the last thing I'll just say about that is that I think it also had to do with the substance of Lamarck's theory, that his theory was all about distributing creative agency and transformational power all throughout the living world. And again, Napoleon was not interested in that. He wanted to control nature, control the living world. He didn't want to learn all about how it transforms and reshapes itself. So I think it was not a congenial theory to Napoleon. It also... Napoleon was trying to court the monarchists, and the idea of this kind of atheistic-sounding theory, was bad PR. There were various... I think it was overdetermined, but certainly Napoleon was not a fan of that.
0:39:03.1 SC: Well, that was another question I had because sometimes... Again, all of us can't help but project our current concerns onto these long-ago battles. So sometimes, you read like that this or that scientific theory encountered resistance from priests and theologians because it was thought to be against whatever doctrine they held. And I always wonder whether that was actually a big deal at the time, or whether people now are projecting the fact that it should have been a big deal, given the implications of these scientific theories. But I guess what I'm hearing from you is it kind of was a big deal in the moment.
0:39:43.7 JR: Well, yeah. It's a really good question, because I think you're absolutely right about that. So for example, I teach a course on the scientific revolution where I talk about Galileo and Copernicanism. And there's a really good example of just exactly what you're saying, which is people assume... Because they know that often people know that Galileo was condemned by the Inquisition of heresy, and they assume that Copernicanism was in trouble with the church from the beginning. But nothing could be farther from the truth. Copernicus was a church Canon, doing church business. He was trying to come up with a plan for calendar reform. The church was very, very worried about calculating dates of feast days like Easter.
0:40:24.8 SC: Easter.
0:40:25.6 JR: Which is the first full moon after the first Sunday after the vernal equinox. So you have to correlate solar and lunar calendars. And it was a mess. People were celebrating Easter all over Christendom at the wrong times, different times. And so Copernicus was a church Canon working on a church problem. And in fact, the Catholic Church was like the NSF of early modern Europe. It funded, especially in astronomy, but in various areas. And so it's really an interesting thing. It was not necessarily the case that the church was going to condemn Copernicanism. And it happened in a kind of complicated way with Galileo. That's a story for another day. But it's just that's an excellent example of what you're describing, that people assume that there would have been a conflict, but there wasn't necessarily.
0:41:15.6 JR: So in the case of Lamarck, what's interesting is that in the middle of the 18th century in France, there was this moment of rigorous naturalism, and a kind of materialism. And in that moment, plenty of people were coming up with... There was plenty of anticlericalism, plenty of criticisms of the church, and that was happening. But then you have this kind of reactionary moment in the 19th century under Napoleon, and following as you go deeper into the 19th century. And so it's also not the case that there's a uniform progress toward greater and greater secularism over time. There are these kind of... There's a complicated history to these sorts of things. And the final thing I'll say is that... I was mentioning that Charles Darwin was very concerned about insisting that his theory was compatible with religious faith. But in fact, the conflict between Darwinian evolution and the church, really came to a head, for the most part, not immediately in England in the 19th century, but in America in the 1920s. There's a delay and a removal of that conflict to America. So yeah, it's a very complicated and fascinating history of relations between science and the church, and various church authorities.
0:42:34.0 SC: But if we're trying to sort of think about what it was like to live back then, is it at least safe to say that there seems to be more connection between the highest levels of scientific and intellectual theorizing, and the highest levels of power politically, in a way that maybe there isn't today? But maybe I'm wrong.
0:42:54.1 JR: Oh, yes. Well, certainly not today. I mean, Napoleon was, as I say, he was very, very interested in science and he kind of, I think, had the sense that modern scientific authority and power, and modern political authority and power, went right together. He went off to Egypt with all of his scientific retinue, and he wanted them to be doing science there. And so he really had the sense that the two went together, that this was the kind of supreme modern political authority would be grounded in a kind of natural science. I think Napoleon certainly believed that. But I would say that... Often, I talk about how, in this scientific revolution class, about how the modern partnership between science and government really began to take shape at the end of the 17th century with the founding of institutions like the Royal Society of London, or the French National Academy of Sciences. And that then you see that relationship developing. And I think right now, in the United States of America, for the first time when I teach this material, I have to say to students, that modern partnership seems to be possibly at an end, or anyway, under threat in a way that I absolutely didn't foresee. So what we see now is kind of stunning. There was just a piece in today's.. Was it today? Maybe it was in the Sunday paper, actually, about the destruction of science in America.
0:44:26.2 SC: Right. Yeah, it was in the New York Times this Sunday.
0:44:27.6 JR: No one could have seen that. That was bipartisan. The idea that science and the state need each other was totally bipartisan.
0:44:33.5 SC: Well, we do tend to think that the conditions we're in right now are eternal, and we project them both to the past and to the future. But it just is never true in either direction. So it's hard to predict. But okay. Anyway, thank you very much for these digressions. They're exactly why we're here, and I love them. But let's get back to Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, and we haven't yet had him come up with his influential theory.
0:44:54.0 JR: Right. Okay. So his theory... Let's see, where shall I start? So the book is called, 'The Power of Life,' instead of the Professor of Insects and Worms. But that phrase, that's his phrase, "le pouvoir de la vie," the power of life. And he uses that phrase to name a force that he thought was intrinsic to living matter, that caused it to complexify, just that. Right. And so it was sort of equivalent to the forces of contemporary physics, which were full of tendencies like electricity follows a conductor. People were very interested in studying that in that moment. Gravity causes common matter to tend downward toward the center of the earth. Magnetized objects attract or repel. So he was... The pouvoir de la vie, the power of life, maybe sounds, again, it maybe has a woo-woo sort of sound to it. But in fact what he meant was a very material force like the forces in contemporary physics. And what he thought was that it all begins with spontaneous generation, with forces like heat or electricity acting on inanimate matter, causing a spontaneous generation of the very, very, very simplest forms of life, single-celled organisms called monads and algae.
0:46:05.0 JR: And then from that moment, the power of life takes over, causing it to complexify ever outward, complexify and ramify. And then as living forms get more and more complex, they... Well, they begin responding to the environment, and they respond. The simplest forms of life respond in very rudimentary ways. But he says, as they become more and more complex, these species, they respond in more and more sophisticated ways until you get to the level of birds and mammals. At the level of birds and mammals, they respond by acts of will, by forming habits, in response to their circumstances, like the giraffe stretching its neck to reach high-up leaves. That's the example everyone knows from Lamarck. And those acts of will, those habits, those behaviors, cause tiny changes that then get added together, inherited and added together over many generations. And so you get dramatic structures, but over a kind of deep well of time. And then there's one more thing I'll say about this, which is that Lamarck thought that living organisms were not just creating and transforming themselves, but that they were also creating the inanimate world around them. He basically said living things are the only creative forces in the world. So he's seizing God's monopoly on creation, and reassigning it to living beings.
0:47:23.2 JR: And they're the only creative things in the world, and they are creating the inanimate world around them. And he says, "I don't really know how the whole thing started. But what I know is... Sort of animal, vegetable, mineral, what came first. But what I do know is that in the world we see, the kind of surface mineral structure of the world is formed by living beings and the things they make." Like the White Cliffs of Dover are made of organisms, and continents and coastlines are shaped by living beings. So he described not only living beings creating and transforming themselves, but also the inanimate world around them.
0:48:06.0 SC: Which in some sense you can't argue with, right? We do shape our environments. And indeed, part of what you're saying kind of sounds... And we'll probably get there in a bit... But it sounds like modern theories of biological, cultural, co-evolution, where ideas can shape our biology and vice versa.
0:48:23.7 JR: Absolutely. Well, one thing is that I started... I tried to find out what current geologists think about this, and I talked with some people and tried to read some papers in geology. And it seems to me that there is a lot of interest in the role of living beings in forming the surface mineralogy of the Earth, really. So there was the Great Oxidation Event that took place with the first living organisms that seeded the atmosphere with oxygen, and without that oxygen, you wouldn't have the same minerals. And so that's one example. But I think that in today's geology and kind of earth sciences, there is a great deal of interest in exactly that, the role of living organisms. And I think actually also, what they call exobiology or exogeology, people who study the idea of life on other planets.
0:49:28.0 SC: Exobiology, yeah.
0:49:29.0 JR: Exobiology, yeah. That that's something that people look for, right? Biology that reflects the presence of living beings. So, okay. So that's one sense in which Lamarck is sort of continuous, I think, with current science. But also, I would say that... One of the reasons I was interested in Lamarck is that some of his ideas are really coming back into mainstream biology in a way they had been banished for all that time. But I think that biologists today, are very interested in various ways in which organisms can shape the course of evolution. And there's, for example, this movement in biology, the extended evolutionary synthesis. My colleague, Marc Feldman, at Stanford, is a member of that movement. I've gotten to know a little about it through him. And Kevin Lala, at University of St. Andrews. And so these are people who are interested in trying to reincorporate developmental, and ecological, and behavioral, and even cultural elements back into the evolutionary picture because... So it's called the extended evolutionary synthesis, in kind of response to the modern synthesis, Julian Huxley declared in 1942, which was the marriage of genetics and neo-Darwinism. And according to the modern synthesis, it has been a very reductive, and kind of confined idea that there's purely random genetic variation and natural selection. And so the extended evolutionary synthesis, people are trying to reopen the field of explanation beyond that.
0:51:01.6 SC: So if I understand it correctly, the two big ingredients for Lamarck are one, this tendency towards complexification. And number two, the inheritance of acquired characteristics. So it's not what Weismann was testing with his amputations, but if I work out and get stronger, it's possible that my children will be stronger because of that.
0:51:26.0 JR: Right. And actually not just Lamarck, but Darwin also was interested in those ideas. The blacksmith's arm, and the idea that you might have... Yeah, those are in keeping with the canonical examples that Lamarck offers. For example, the water birds who stretch their toes in order to paddle in the water, and they end up getting very, very slightly each time, more webbing between their toes. He has this wonderful passage where he talks about... He thinks that water birds actually... Let's see, how does he describe it? He says that shorebirds who don't like the water, they don't really want to be in the water, but they want to wade out to get food. And so they stretch their legs and they crane their necks, and so that's how you get the very, very long, skinny legs. Whereas, he says, ducks and swans, they like the water. And so they don't stretch their legs, but they get long necks because they're reaching down. So it has to do also with their likes and dislikes. And this is something that Darwin picked up, among other places, in his theory of sexual selection. Because according to sexual selection, Darwin describes animals by choosing mates according to their own standards of beauty and sexiness. They shape kind of one another, from generation to generation. And so Darwin actually talks about sexual selection as a kind of animals exerting their standards of beauty and their aesthetic senses. So that's very much in keeping with Lamarck.
0:53:07.0 SC: I don't know if you know about the... Speaking of the other ingredient, the increased complexification. I had a podcast guest a couple of months ago... Or maybe it's over a year ago now, Michael Wong, who recently came out with a new book with Robert Hazen called, 'Time's Second Arrow,' where they propose a law of increasing functional information, which is basically their way of quantifying the idea that organisms, as a whole, do grow more complex over time.
0:53:34.8 JR: Oh, that is beautiful. I will read that. Robert Hazen is among the people I was just thinking of when I was talking about current geology and interest in biogenesis.
0:53:45.0 SC: Yeah, I think that there's details there. That's a whole another thing. But I get the spirit of what you're trying to say, because there are certainly elements in Lamarck that absolutely are still there, or even being rediscovered now. So not to oversimplify it, but I'll say in the oversimplified version, then you can fix it for me. It was the inheritance of acquired characteristics aspect of Lamarck's thought, that some people decided was the opposite of what Darwin said, and therefore, we should banish it from our discussions. But nowadays, we're sort of rediscovering little senses in which maybe something like that is actually real.
0:54:30.7 JR: Yeah, I think there are a few different ways, actually. I can mention a few different... Because the last line of the book... Which I realize is very polemical... The last line of the book is, "Lamarck was right." And of course, what do I mean by somebody who died in 1829 being right about evolution? He didn't know anything about genetics. So I want to be very careful to specify what I mean by that, is that animal behavior plays a role in shaping the course of evolution. But there are various different ways... Two things I want to be careful about. First of all, I mean that animal behavior plays a role in shaping the course of evolution. And also, I don't mean Darwin was wrong when I say Lamarck was right. As I say, Darwin was a Lamarckian, and he believed in these tendencies. But anyway, a few different ways in which behavior can shape the course of evolution, or in which acquired characteristics can be inherited. One example that everybody thinks of nowadays is epigenetic changes.
0:55:26.6 JR: And so epigenetic inheritance refers to structures that are outside of the DNA, that are sort of around the DNA, that affect gene expression, and that can therefore influence the course of evolution. And people have been... That's a big area now, of research in biology, and there are examples in every form of life in every possible context. But I have gotten involved... Actually, this is one of the fun aspects of this great adventure of this Lamarck book, is that I've managed to persuade some very nice biologists to do a research experiment on epigenetic inheritance in giraffes. And I've never been involved in a science experiment, being a historian, but I really wondered... First, it started because I really wondered, has anybody ever studied epigenetic inheritance in giraffes? The reason, you know, giraffes are the emblematic Lamarck animal, everybody thinks of giraffes, and epigenetic inheritance, it seems, can be... That is to say, epigenetic changes in a given individual lifetime, can be inherited in the next generation. So those are acquired changes that can be inherited, a kind of Lamarckian inheritance. So I wondered if anybody had studied epigenetic inheritance in giraffes. I couldn't find anything. I asked biologists who said, "Yeah, you're right." And so we've done this experiment, working with the Giraffe Conservation Foundation in Namibia. They sent us cheek swabs. When I told my daughter this, she just thought that was the most hilarious thing she'd ever... She was imagining a very, very long Q-tip or... Anyway, they sent us cheek swabs from two different species of giraffes and okapi, which are the closest relative to giraffes with a much shorter neck. And we have found... When I say we, I mean my collaborator biologists have found that there are epigenetic differences between the two species of giraffes, and between giraffes and okapi. This is just a very, very preliminary experiment. I mean, you'd have to do a lot more work now, to find out what those might mean. And it's also under review, it's not yet published. But it's been very cool to be a part of that research.
0:57:33.4 JR: So that's one example, epigenetic inheritance. Another example is behavior. So there's this... Well, Peter and Rosemary Grant, who were evolutionary biologists at Princeton, a married couple and partners in science. And they studied Darwin's finches in the Galapagos, and they showed speciation happening there in real time over 40 years. And what they showed was that behavioral isolation of populations preceded reproductive isolation, genetic isolation. Which is to say, that the populations stopped mating long before they became infertile, which they knew because if it happened once in a blue moon, there would be offspring. You see what I mean? So the behavioral isolation preceded the genetic isolation, and that is sort of behavior leading natural selection.
0:58:32.0 JR: There's another example of this, a woman at Yale, named Martha Munoz, who's an extraordinary researcher who has studied lizards in the Dominican Republic that have moved up from sea level, all the way to 3,000 meters where it's cold. And she has shown that by being, she says, behaviorally nimble, they have... Instead of evolving cold tolerance, what they have done is they heat themselves on the sun-baked rock, and then they have to scurry into crevices to escape predators. And so they've evolved things that make it easy to hide in a crevice, like flat head and short legs. And so it's again behavior leading natural selection. And then just one last thing which Marc Feldman, my colleague and friend that I mentioned earlier at Stanford, he's been very involved in the field of niche construction, which is that the animal shapes the environmental niche, that then exerts pressures upon it, so it's a two-way street. So there are all kinds of examples of ways in which, I would say, in my broader interpretation of the meaning of that sentence, "Lamarck was right."
0:59:30.2 SC: Well, I'm very well aware, as a physicist, of the love that scientists have for finding the simplest possible way of talking about things. And the idea that we have some genome, some list of base pairs in our DNA, and basically that's everything, that's what gets handed down, that's what has all the effects on who we are, is very seductive. But being that biology is much more complicated than physics, in the end I'm not surprised, that in fact, there's not a direct one-to-one map from the genome to who we are. There are all these other complicated things going along, including other genomes, like in our mitochondria and so forth, and then other parts of the organism like our microbiome. And all of these seem to me to be, like you've already said, not non-Darwinian, but enhancements or embellishments of the idea that we're simply a list of base pairs handed down from generation to generation.
1:00:30.5 JR: Yeah, exactly. I think that's exactly it. I think it's partly a love of simplicity, but I also think there are some other things maybe going on there. I mentioned in the first instance, in the later 19th, early 20th century, I think it had to do with making room for a more traditional theological vision of living things. If the organism is passive, that leaves room for a designer God behind the scenes. But I also think... I've been really struck by the degree to which neo-Darwinists of the middle decades of the 20th century, from the inception of the modern synthesis... Julian Huxley, the English biologist, declared the modern synthesis in 1942. So if you look from those middle decades of the 20th century onward, the degree to which they were eugenicists. Actually, even going back before that, you can go back to R.A. Fisher, the geneticist, statistician, did foundational work in neo-Darwinist biology. And Haldane... I'm just naming people involved in this establishment of this neo-Darwinist paradigm. They were all eugenicists, pretty much without exception. And so you have to relinquish the idea that you had science and then pseudo-science, or science and miscarriages of science. It really wasn't the case. They were really the same. And I think there was a sort of eugenic logic built into the idea of the passivity of living beings, including human beings. There was a kind of eugenic logic built into the deep structure of that idea, that was attractive to these generations of kind of... What's the word? It's a very heroic model of science. Julian Huxley says, "We can become the general managers of evolution," and he coined the term, transhumanism, which is a term apparently, that Jeffrey Epstein really liked.
1:02:33.8 SC: Yeah, that's gone out of style.
1:02:37.9 JR: Transhumanism, and we can take hold... It's funny because there's a sort of contradiction. You have this passive model of what living things, including human beings, are. And yet, they have the idea that they can seize hold of it and exert their own structure on it. So I have a transcript of a conference that took place in London in 1962, where all of these major figures were present. And they were saying things like... They were trying to figure out how to solve the problem. Fisher was very worried, although he wasn't at that conference. But he had been very worried that poor people have more children than rich people. And he was assuming that poor people are genetically inferior. And so how can we solve that problem? And people had various ideas, like maybe you could offer a tax rebate to rich people for having more children, or something like that. And so people were discussing this kind of idea at the conference. And Francis Crick says, "Well, it should be a simple matter for a government to put a sterilizing agent into the food supply. And then people would have to apply for a license to have children, and then they could give you an antidote." And he was sort of... It was sort of...
1:03:49.5 SC: By-the-way. Yeah, casual.
1:03:50.8 JR: Somewhat tongue in cheek. Sorry?
1:03:52.4 SC: It was just a by-the-way, casual suggestion. Yeah.
1:03:54.1 JR: Yeah. People were joking about this. So it was absolutely mainstream. And I think that Watson, James Watson, got in trouble very late in his life, for saying all this kind of racist stuff out loud in a very ugly way. But interestingly, what he was saying was really not out of keeping with what was utterly mainstream in that science through all those decades, and maybe in some ways even today. And so, I guess what I'm suggesting is that the attraction to this reductive neo-Darwinist paradigm, is not purely a love of simplicity. But I think it's a love of power and control also. It can be, anyway. And that it's connected with a kind of eugenics, but also with an idea of exerting control on the natural world. And so, I'm hopeful that the story of Lamarck, and Lamarckism, can cast some historical perspective on the current state of evolutionary biology, and maybe suggest other ways of thinking about organisms. Well, already people are pursuing these other ways of thinking about organisms that are less about control and domination.
1:05:06.5 SC: Well, and... I have the impression, and again, I'm certainly not an expert, so correct me. But these kinds of issues of evolution, and how we shape who we are, et cetera., people have a lot of preexisting ideas, that they then sort of pseudo-science-ize into their scientific theorizing. And I think it happens in all different ways. Like famously, there was Lysenkoism in the Soviet Union, which had a family connection to Lamarck somehow.
1:05:36.4 JR: Yeah, Lysenko. Okay. That's a really interesting episode. And that's, I think, something else. People think of giraffes, that's one association they have with Lamarck. And often people think of Lysenko, as the other association they have. So he claimed to be a Lamarckian in the 1940s in the Soviet Union. Lysenko, the Soviet biologist, claimed that he could change the germination season of wheat by subjecting it to cold and moisture. And that was actually something that farmers did, and you can indeed do that. But he also claimed that it would be inherited in the next generation, which it wasn't. But that, again, is not Lamarckism, really. That is more like Weismann's chopping off the tails of mice. It's an exertion of...
1:06:23.9 SC: It's not the self doing the work.
1:06:26.2 JR: Right. Exactly. It's an exertion from outside. Anyway, Lysenko claimed he could do this, Stalin embraced it, and it became very difficult to do genetic research in the Soviet Union. And actually, one Soviet geneticist, Vavilov, was imprisoned and died in prison. And so it was a terrible episode. But what's interesting to me about that episode is that it was really ideological from both sides. So on the American, European, Western side, for example, Julian Huxley seized hold of this example of Lysenko, because this was a moment when he and other neo-Darwinists were very busily eradicating Marxism from Darwinism. And he seized hold of Lysenko, and he basically explained that the.. He said that the Soviet communists couldn't accept genetics because they couldn't accept the reality of the genetic inequality of people. People are genetically unequal, and they were radical egalitarians, and so they couldn't accept that. And so basically, he equated Lamarckism with Soviet communism. And so in the West, it became very difficult to do research on Lamarckian inheritance, or anything outside of the genome, also for ideological reasons. To say that it was ideological in the Soviet Union, doesn't mean that it wasn't ideological in the West.
1:07:52.0 SC: No, exactly. All the sides, everyone does it. Yeah.
1:07:55.2 JR: And Huxley also said... This was part of his... He was a eugenicist, as I mentioned, and he said that we have to exploit the reality of genetic inequality. And that the slogan should be, our slogan, he said, should be, "free, but unequal." Right? That's a perfect encapsulation of the anti-Soviet, of the kind of Cold War ideology, I think.
1:08:12.8 SC: Some will be more free than others when all is said and done, typically, in that. So okay, good. This has been a very, very wonderful journey through both the history, and the biography, and the science of it all. I have two questions to wind things up, and they're both pretty open-ended. So one, you've already alluded to this one, but given the whole story, given Lamarck and Darwin, and the ideological components, and the theological components, what are the lessons that you draw, for how science should be done? Is it good to be aware of the predilections we have for letting certain non-epistemic factors creep in to how we theorize and experiment?
1:08:54.2 JR: Oh, thank you for asking that. Actually, that's something very close to my heart. I think that... Well, one thing is that I talk with students about this a lot. I think that science is an element of human culture, and it's ineradicable from the... It's not separable from the rest of culture. So another thing is that interpretation goes all the way down. Everything we know, is known by us from our perspective in a culture and in a situation. And our interpretation is inseparable from our knowledge of the world. So rather than striving for a kind of view-from-nowhere objectivity, that's impossible. That can't happen. So rather than striving for that, or claiming to represent it, and to speak ex cathedra in the name of science or nature, instead of that, I think the thing to aspire to is to be as self-conscious and transparent as possible about what our interpretative goals are and why. And that is a different thing from objectivity, but it is still a question of rigor, it's still a search for truth. But it is accepting the reality that interpretation goes all the way down, and that that's not a bad thing. It's not a taint. It is just what it is to be a human trying to understand the world.
1:10:06.4 JR: And then another thing I would say is that, up through the end of the 19th century, the sciences were not separate from... As you've just been pointing out... The sciences were not separate from literature, or art, or aesthetics, other elements of the culture, philosophy. It was all kind of mixed together. And I was mentioning that Darwin was a brilliant writer, and he thought about his science, I think, in very literary terms, and in relation to philosophy and literature. And Lamarck also was a philosopher and a musician. And he was thinking in, this kind of, holistic way. And then there was this moment of divorce at the end of the... I would say, 25 years on either side of the turn of the 19th to 20th century, there's a radical divorce between science and all other forms of knowing. And that's a whole story that I want to tell in another book, I think. The reasons for that divorce, I think, were interesting, and political, and complicated. But I think, on some level, it is impoverishing on both sides. And I think that if we could return to a more integral way of approaching the world in which science is not isolated, existing in splendid isolation on its own apart from everything else, but is more connected with other areas, that that would be a much better thing.
1:11:36.6 JR: So teaching the history of science at a place like Stanford, I am kind of the soul of togetherness between both sides of campus, the sciences and the other areas. And I've been really excited to be a part of the conversations with these people in the extended evolutionary synthesis, who, as I mentioned, they're interested in culture. They talk about whales as having a culture, deciding on what song they're going to sing, and how they're going to hunt, and doing that, handing that down to their offspring, these practices. That's a form of culture. And so the reason they were interested in talking with a historian and philosopher of science is because these are people who study culture. So that more integral approach, I think, is maybe already happening, and it's very exciting thing, I think.
1:12:17.5 SC: Well, this is part of the motivation before us, for us trying to revive the idea of natural philosophy, bringing the natural sciences back into more conversation with the philosophical side of things. Good. Then the final question... That question was what are the lessons for how science is done. The final question is what are the lessons for taking care of the world? You do at the end of the book sort of say, "okay, if we're remembering, or being reminded of the fact that we are agents, and that change is created from within us as well as external factors," does that have any implications for our place as denizens of planet Earth?
1:12:55.4 JR: Yeah. That's a wonderful question. Let me see if I can do justice to that question. One thing I think is that it's important to think in participatory terms. We are acting from within the natural world, and not from outside of it and imposing an order upon it. And there's a French... He calls himself an environmental philosopher, named, Baptiste Morizot. He's at the University of Aix-Marseille, I think. And he's written several books about this question of how... His argument is that environmentalists often... People who are really very concerned about conservation and preservation, they nevertheless continue to think in terms of exerting an order, like eradicating invasive species, and maintaining an ecology in the exact way that they feel that it should be maintained, and so forth. And that this mindset is still participating in the older, destructive, way of thinking about things. And that instead, we should be regarding ourselves... Like, for example, E.O. Wilson had this, I think, crazy idea, half-Earth idea. That humans should occupy only half the planet, and leave the other half wild, as though humans could be extricated from the rest of the natural world. And it's not the case. We're animals. This is what Lamarck and Darwin have shown us. We are animals, in the animal world. We are part of nature. And so I think that, somehow, we need to imagine our environmentalist conservation efforts, sort of as being from within the natural world and not from without.
1:14:32.3 SC: I think that's a perfect motto to end on. It gives us absolutely something to think about and a way to move forward. So, Jessica Riskin, thanks very much for being on the Mindscape podcast.
1:14:41.3 JR: Thank you so much. It's really been fun. It's been wonderful.
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Jessica Riskin is a brilliant historian and deep thinker on many subjects. Besides her book on Lamarck, which
I will definitely read, she has two brilliant essays on her NY Review of Books contributor page. One is a deeply thoughtful refutation of Stephen Pinker’s “Enlightenment Now” which thoroughly debunks many of Pinker’s lamest and most unsupported ideas by looking at his sources and pointing out why they don’t say what he means and often compel an opposing conclusion. The second, and even better, essay (“Turtles All the Way Up”) shreds Robert Sapolsky’s idiotic determinist fairy tale, pointing out that the hard determinist position Sapolsky adopts is simply a philosophical assumption which can never be demonstrated scientifically. I would add that, like most determinists, he has numerous social policies he would like to change (eg, retributive judicial punishment), but can never explain how any social policies can be changed when all of our actions are already, in his view, already determined. Sapolsky’s belief in determinism is really just a religious faith where all powerful determinism substitutes for the all powerful god of monotheism. With Sapolsky, it’s nonsense all the way down. Sapolsky was so incensed by Riskin’s essay that he published his own lame and completely impotent critical response which just served to prove Riskin’s points.
Her talk with Sean is excellent and quite interesting. Riskin is a believer in the extended evolutionary synthesis as anyone who understands it probably should be .
One of Lamarck’s ideas not explored in this talk is spontaneous generation. Worth thinking about in terms of how life on this planet or the universe itself initially appeared. Scientists theorize that at one point in its early history, Earth could not and did not support life although it seems to have rapidly appeared perhaps near undersea volcanos. Well how did that happen? Are we back to Lamarck’s spontaneous generation or did life ride here from outer space on a passing asteroid?
Very interesting and enjoyable. In the section on the effect of automata on the philosophy of science, she mentioned elaborate machines that were programmed by cams. In 1964, as a 4th grader I read “Space Cadet” by Robert Heinlein. Near the end, our heroes have to improvise a rocket takeoff from Venus. They do the calculations, then “cut a cam” to program the rocket.
Yes, probably, in the future people will be surprised that presidents had such close relationships with scientific leaders and technical leaders. They may be surprised of close personal friendships with Cardiologist Dr. Memhet Oz or with long-time Stanford professor and M.D. Jay BhattDirector (Stanford, NIH).
They may also find it difficult to believe that Trump had close friendship with one of the leading meteorologist Kelvin Droegemeier and with financial and innovation leaders such as David Sacks, Marc Andreessen, Sergey Brin (Google), Jensen Huang, John Martinis (Nobel Prize winning physicist, Google), and with Mark Zuckerberg.
Probably, they’ll also find it difficult to believe that the man who was the driving force behind the first broad-scale electric car in production, and the one leading development of rockets to get us to Mars was actually sleeping on the president’s couch for quite some time. In the future, there will probably never be such close interactions.