From: Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History by Stephen Jay Gould
1. Two Words That Change Everything
In this subtle yet powerful section, Stephen Jay Gould reframes how we understand the evolutionary past by clarifying a distinction that is often ignored: disparity vs. diversity. These terms may sound similar, but Gould shows how their confusion has distorted our view of life's history.
- Diversity = number of species or individuals
- Disparity = range of anatomical forms or body plans
Gould’s central claim: Disparity arose early, especially during the Cambrian Explosion, and has narrowed over time—even as diversity (the number of species) has increased.
2. A Cambrian Bestiary of Strange Forms
The Burgess Shale shows a world far more anatomically experimental than today. Creatures like Opabinia (with five eyes and a backward-facing proboscis), Anomalocaris (with grasping appendages and radial mouths), and many others defied existing classification.
“We are not the survivors of a steady march of improvement, but the lucky remnants of a massive die-off of creative experimentation.” — Gould
Early life explored a wider range of body plans than those that survived. Today’s animal phyla represent only a subset of these original experiments.
3. Why Disparity Matters More Than Diversity
Gould critiques the idea that life has continuously become more complex or creative. In terms of disparity, the greatest explosion of innovation occurred early in life’s history, not late. The fact that today’s world contains millions of species doesn't mean evolution has become more inventive. Instead, it has specialized and elaborated on existing forms.
For example, insects are incredibly diverse (millions of species), but they share a basic body plan: head, thorax, abdomen. The disparity between an insect and a jellyfish, however, is much greater.
4. Genomics and Evo-Devo Support Gould
Gould wrote *Wonderful Life* just before the explosion of genomics and evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo), yet these fields powerfully confirm his insights.
- Hox genes: Shared by most animals, these master regulators control body segmentation and structure. During the Cambrian, their duplication and variation helped generate novel body plans.
- Developmental plasticity: Early animals likely had greater freedom in gene expression and morphological experimentation. Today, developmental constraints limit radical form changes.
- Genomic reuse: Many species reuse ancient genetic toolkits rather than inventing new ones. Morphological innovation slows not because life is done exploring, but because fewer viable paths remain.
This suggests that the evolutionary potential for new body plans was greatest early on, matching the pattern of early disparity followed by later diversity.
5. The Fossil Record Is Not a Ladder
Gould cautions against thinking of life as a march toward complexity. The fossil record is not a ladder—it’s a bush. Most branches were pruned early, and the survivors were often no better than those that vanished. Survival depended more on luck and ecological fit than superiority.
Today’s life forms sit atop the last few surviving branches. That doesn't mean we’re the best—just that our ancestors happened to survive the evolutionary lottery.
6. Final Thoughts
The distinction between disparity and diversity is not just a semantic trick. It forces us to rethink how we teach, visualize, and understand evolution. Gould’s insight—powerfully illustrated through the Burgess Shale—is that life began with an exuberant explosion of form, and what remains is only a shadow of that original creativity.
“Disparity was maximal early and has decreased ever since. We are the heirs of survivors—not the culmination of progress.” — Paraphrased from Gould
Read the full book: Wonderful Life – Full PDF