Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Strange Career of Formerly Independent Things

One of the article’s most important ideas is that major transitions often convert independent replicators into dependent parts.

Before the transition, the units can reproduce on their own. Afterward, they can replicate only as components of a larger whole.

This is one of evolution’s great mergers and acquisitions. 🧫

Genes become chromosomes. Bacteria become mitochondria and chloroplasts. Single cells become parts of animals, plants, and fungi. Individual insects become workers in colonies. Individual humans become participants in language-based societies.

The problem: lower-level selfishness

The authors insist that this transformation is not easy. Natural selection acting at the lower level can sabotage the higher-level unit.

Examples:

A gene may cheat Mendelian inheritance through meiotic drive or transposable elements.

An asexual female may have a short-term advantage over sexual reproduction because she does not pay the cost of producing males.

A somatic plant cell could, in principle, improve its own genetic transmission by becoming a flower bud even if this harms the plant.

Worker bees may lay male eggs rather than exclusively help the queen reproduce.

These examples show that “integration” is always vulnerable. A body, colony, genome, or society is a political arrangement among replicators. The parliament can be stormed from within.

Why higher-level units do not collapse immediately

The authors argue that major transitions cannot be explained by their eventual long-term benefits. Eukaryotic chromosomes later allowed larger genomes, but that does not explain why eukaryotic chromosome segregation evolved in the first place. Sex later helped eukaryotes diversify, but it could not have originated because of benefits millions of generations in the future.

Instead, the transitions must be explained by immediate selective advantages to replicators.

This is where the gene-centered perspective enters. Szathmáry and Maynard Smith lean on the tradition of George Williams and Richard Dawkins: selection must be explained in terms of benefits to replicators now, not future glory.

The small-founder trick

A key stabilizing principle is that higher-level organisms often pass through a bottleneck with one or very few genetic founders.

A multicellular animal develops from a single fertilized egg. That means its cells are genetically almost identical. Most eukaryotes inherit organelles from one parent only, making organelles within an individual closely related. Early protocells, the authors suggest, may have worked similarly.

This is powerful because high relatedness reduces internal conflict. If all the cells in a body share the same genes, a cell’s evolutionary interests are largely aligned with the body’s success. Not perfectly, as cancer reminds us, but enough for bodies to function.

When does a group become an organism?

The article discusses the idea of the “superorganism.” A group qualifies when it has functional organization like an organism and when selection can act at the group level.

For group selection to work well, several conditions help:

The number of groups should be large.

Migration between groups should be low.

Each group should have no more than one parental group.

These conditions create differences between groups but similarity within groups. That lets selection act on whole groups rather than being drowned by competition among their parts.

Two forces that lock transitions in place

The article names two processes that help maintain higher-level entities once they evolve.

Contingent irreversibility. A formerly independent entity may lose the ability to live alone. Mitochondria cannot go back to free-living bacterial life because many of their genes have moved to the nucleus. Worker bees cannot simply found independent bee civilizations. Cancer cells may escape body control, but they do not become successful protists.

The irreversibility is “contingent” because the reasons are historically accidental. Evolution closes doors not by design, but by piling furniture in front of them.

Central control. If a selfish mutation arises in one gene, suppressor mutations elsewhere in the genome can evolve to restrain it. Leigh’s “parliament of genes” is not democracy by ballot. It is more like every other locus having an incentive to stop the rogue actor.

The message: major transitions require mechanisms that suppress internal rebellion. Without them, the larger unit dissolves back into squabbling parts.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Silent Spring – Chapter 3: Elixirs of Death

 If the first two chapters of Silent Spring establish the moral and philosophical stakes, Chapter 3, “Elixirs of Death,” is where Rachel Carson removes any remaining comfort. The title is deliberately ironic. What are marketed as life-giving solutions—agricultural “elixirs”—are, in Carson’s telling, agents of slow, cumulative death.

Carson opens by dismantling a powerful postwar myth: that modern pesticides are precise, selective, and scientifically controlled. She argues that this belief is sustained less by evidence than by repetition. The reality, she shows, is messier, cruder, and far more dangerous.

She introduces the chemical families that dominate the pesticide landscape of the mid-20th century: chlorinated hydrocarbons such as DDT, aldrin, dieldrin, and heptachlor; and organophosphates derived from wartime nerve agents. These chemicals are described not just by their names, but by their properties—persistence, fat solubility, and broad toxicity.

Carson emphasizes a crucial point: these substances are biocides, not insecticides. They do not discriminate. Anything living—soil organisms, fish, birds, mammals—may be affected. The idea of a “target species” is, in practice, a comforting fiction.

The chapter proceeds through a series of case studies. Carson describes fields sprayed to control insects where birds die in droves, streams treated for mosquitoes where fish float lifeless on the surface, and farmlands where beneficial insects vanish along with pests. Each example reinforces the same pattern: the chemical solution creates ecological voids that invite further instability.

Carson devotes significant attention to persistence. Unlike older botanical poisons that degrade quickly, synthetic pesticides linger for years. They accumulate in soil, seep into groundwater, and travel through air currents. The environment becomes a reservoir of poison, releasing it slowly back into living systems.

Human exposure is addressed not as an abstract risk but as an inevitability. Carson notes residues on fruits, vegetables, dairy products, and meat. She challenges the reassurance that regulatory “tolerance levels” ensure safety, pointing out how little is known about long-term, low-dose exposure and chemical interactions.

A striking feature of the chapter is Carson’s use of official sources against themselves. She quotes government reports, industry data, and scientific studies—often dry and technical—then translates them into human consequences. The danger is not hidden; it is buried in footnotes and euphemisms.

The chapter closes with a sobering observation: society has normalized a level of chemical exposure that would have been unthinkable a generation earlier. Poison has been domesticated, sprayed casually from planes and trucks, applied near homes and schools. What was once extraordinary has become routine.

“Elixirs of Death” thus marks the moment where Silent Spring fully becomes an exposé. The problem is no longer hypothetical or ethical—it is chemical, measurable, and already embedded in daily life.

Evolutionary Stasis and the Uneven Tempo of Life

Source: Ernst Mayr, “Speciation and Macroevolution,” Evolution 36(6), 1982, pp. 1119-1132.

One of the great puzzles Mayr addresses is evolutionary stasis: why do some species appear to change very little for long periods? Living fossils, long-lived morphologies, and stable fossil forms all suggest that evolution is not a constant-motion machine.

Mayr argues that evolutionary rates vary dramatically and that this variation is linked to population structure. In particular, he repeatedly emphasizes that, other things being equal, the rate of evolution is inversely correlated with population size. Small isolated populations can evolve rapidly. Large widespread populations may be evolutionarily inert.

He writes: “rate of speciation is inversely correlated with population size.” This helps explain why widespread, populous species are often the ones paleontologists encounter in the fossil record. They are abundant, fossilizable, and visible. They are also expected to show the least evolutionary change.

This creates another observational bias. The fossil record overrepresents the very species least likely to show rapid evolutionary change and underrepresents small peripheral populations where new species may originate.

Mayr resists an overly rigid version of punctuated equilibria in which all established species become static after their origin. Instead, he proposes a full spectrum of rates: extremely rapid change in some peripatric speciation events, slow continuing change in some species, and near-total stasis in widespread populous forms.

This spectrum is important. Mayr is not replacing one dogma with another. He is arguing for pluralism. Evolutionary tempo depends on population size, isolation, ecology, genetic cohesion, and history.

His explanation of stasis is also holistic. The atomistic view might say that stabilizing selection simply removes mutations, keeping the genotype essentially unchanged. Mayr’s preferred view is different. The phenotype may remain stable even while the genotype turns over, because the cohesion of the genotype compensates internally. In this view, stasis is not genetic paralysis. It is dynamic stability.

This is a striking idea. A species can look still from the outside while molecular and genetic change continues within. The organismal form persists because internal developmental and genetic systems buffer change.

Key quote: “If the Limulus or Triops of today is morphologically almost indistinguishable from their ancestors of 100 or 200 million years ago, this does not mean that they still have the same genotype.”

Takeaway: Evolution does not tick at one speed. Some lineages sprint, some drift, some hold form while changing internally. For Mayr, population structure helps explain this uneven tempo.

Evolution Does Not Promise Complexity, So Why Did Complexity Happen?

Evolution has no built-in ladder. There is no law saying bacteria must become amoebas, amoebas must become animals, or primates must become poets. Szathmáry and Maynard Smith begin from that bracing point: there is neither a theoretical necessity nor a clean empirical rule that all lineages increase in complexity over time.

And yet, here we are.

Eukaryotic cells are more internally elaborate than prokaryotes. Animals and plants are more complex than single-celled protists. Human societies transmit information in ways no bacterium ever dreamed of, assuming bacteria dream in plasmids.

The authors’ central proposal is that complexity increased in some lineages because evolution passed through a small number of “major transitions.” Each transition changed not merely what organisms looked like, but how biological information was stored, replicated, transmitted, and organized.

The major transitions

The article’s Table 1 lists the great evolutionary handoffs:

  1. Replicating molecules became populations of molecules inside compartments.
  2. Unlinked replicators became chromosomes.
  3. RNA, once both gene and enzyme, gave way to DNA plus protein, via the genetic code.
  4. Prokaryotes became eukaryotes.
  5. Asexual clones became sexual populations.
  6. Protists became animals, plants, and fungi through cell differentiation.
  7. Solitary individuals became colonies with non-reproductive castes.
  8. Primate societies became human societies through language.

At each step, previously independent units became locked into a larger evolutionary unit. Free-living bacteria became organelles. Individual cells became parts of multicellular bodies. Individual insects became components of colonies. Words and gestures became grammar-bearing language.

Complexity, but how do we measure it?

The article is cautious about complexity. There is no universally accepted biological complexity-meter, no little dashboard reading “complexity: 87%.”

The authors discuss two rough measures.

First, genome size and coding DNA. Table 2 compares organisms such as E. coli, yeast, nematodes, fruit flies, newts, humans, lungfish, and flowering plants. The general pattern is that eukaryotes have larger coding genomes than prokaryotes, and animals and plants often have more genetic material than protists. But genome size is a slippery clue. Lungfish and some plants have enormous genomes without being obviously “more complex” than humans.

Second, behavioral and morphological richness. A bacterium does many impressive things, but it does not phagocytose prey with a cytoskeleton, compose music, or build a bee colony. Cell types, behaviors, and developmental possibilities may better capture the intuitive sense of complexity.

The article’s deeper point is not simply that complexity increased. It asks: by what mechanisms could the amount and organization of information increase?

The three engines of added information

Figure 1 gives three major routes:

Duplication and divergence. A gene is copied. One copy keeps the old job, while the other is free to mutate into a new role. This is the classic “photocopy, then improvise” engine of genetic innovation.

Symbiosis. Separate replicators or organisms join into a cooperative unit. The figure moves from independent replicators, to a hypercycle, to enclosure in a compartment, to physical linkage. This is the visual seed of mitochondria, chloroplasts, and other once-independent entities becoming parts of a larger whole.

Epigenesis. Genes do not merely exist as sequences. They can be switched on or off in heritable states. Figure 1 shows genes A, B, and C with activity states passed through cell division. This foreshadows the evolution of differentiated cell types in multicellular organisms.

The series thesis

The rest of the article keeps circling a single question with different masks:

How can evolution make a new individual out of old individuals?

That question applies to genes on chromosomes, organelles inside cells, cells inside bodies, insects inside colonies, and minds inside language communities. The answer is not sentimental cooperation. It is a rugged evolutionary bargain: cooperation can evolve when conflicts are suppressed, relatedness is high, division of labour pays, and information transmission becomes more powerful.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Where Carson’s Ethical Framework Meets Its Limits

While Chapter 2 remains profoundly influential, it also raises unresolved tensions that deserve critical examination.

Carson’s framing of an “obligation to endure” is morally compelling but philosophically ambiguous. Who holds this obligation? Scientists? Governments? Farmers? Consumers? The chapter offers little guidance on how responsibility should be distributed across complex socio-economic systems.

Critics have also noted that Carson’s argument risks moral absolutism. By emphasizing restraint, she underplays contexts where intervention may be ethically necessary—such as disease control, food security, and invasive species management.

The chapter’s skepticism toward technological solutions has been read by some as implicitly anti-modern. While Carson herself acknowledged the benefits of chemistry, her language sometimes blurs into a broader distrust of technological intervention as such. This has occasionally been mobilized to oppose even well-regulated, evidence-based technologies.

There is also a geopolitical blind spot. Carson writes primarily from a U.S. perspective, where chemical abundance was a problem of excess. In much of the Global South, the ethical calculus has been different: the risks of chemical exposure weighed against the risks of hunger and disease.

Finally, Carson’s appeal to endurance presumes ecological stability as an ideal. Contemporary ecology recognizes that ecosystems are dynamic, adaptive, and sometimes resilient in unexpected ways. The challenge today is not merely preservation, but governance of change.

Yet these critiques do not diminish the chapter’s importance. Instead, they highlight its role as a starting point rather than a final doctrine.

Carson gave us an ethical vocabulary for environmental harm. Our task is to refine that vocabulary for a world even more chemically, technologically, and politically complex than the one she faced.

Punctuated Equilibria Without Hopeful Monsters

Source: Ernst Mayr, “Speciation and Macroevolution,” Evolution 36(6), 1982, pp. 1119-1132. 

Mayr then turns to punctuated equilibria, the theory proposed by Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould in 1972. He sees it as closely related to his own theory of peripatric speciation. If new species arise rapidly in small peripheral isolates, then the fossil record should not be expected to show smooth, finely graded transitions. New forms may appear suddenly because their actual origin occurred in small, local populations unlikely to fossilize.

Mayr quotes Eldredge and Gould’s famous statement: “If new species arise very rapidly in small, peripherally isolated local populations, then the great expectation of insensibly graded fossil sequences is a chimera.”

But Mayr is careful to distinguish two versions of punctuated equilibria.

The first is the “moderate” or “Mayr version.” Here, peripatric speciation produces rapid but still gradual population-level change. Genetic restructuring occurs across generations. It may be fast in geological time, but it is not a single-step saltation.

The second is the “drastic” or “Goldschmidtian” version. This invokes systemic mutations and “hopeful monsters,” where a single individual with a major developmental change founds a new evolutionary line. Mayr strongly rejects this.

He sees the basic difference clearly: in the moderate version, change happens through “a gradual, albeit rapid and sometimes rather drastic genetic restructuring of populations.” In the Goldschmidtian version, a systemic mutation produces a single individual that begins a new evolutionary tradition.

Mayr is especially concerned that Gould’s writings in the 1970s appeared to revive Goldschmidt. Gould had written that “macroevolution is not simply microevolution extrapolated” and that major structural transitions can occur rapidly. Mayr worries that this could be read as support for hopeful monsters.

Mayr’s response is firm: Darwinian evolution can accommodate rapid change, large effects, chromosomal rearrangements, and major genetic reconstruction, as long as these are population-level processes. In sexually reproducing organisms, even major genetic changes must pass through polymorphism, heterozygosity, recombination, and selection. That makes them gradual in the biological sense, even if they look sudden to paleontologists.

The scale of observation matters. To a paleontologist, thousands of years may be an instant. To a population biologist, thousands of generations may be a long, analyzable process. The same event can look saltational in the fossil record and gradual in population genetics.

Key quote: “For a paleontologist thousands and even ten thousands of years are like a moment.”

Takeaway: Mayr accepts punctuated patterns but rejects hopeful monsters. Punctuation, for him, is what rapid population-level speciation looks like when viewed through the coarse lens of geological time.

The Evolution of Heredity, From Chemical Echoes to DNA and Grammar

The article’s most ambitious section follows heredity itself through a series of upgrades.

Heredity means like begets like. But there are different kinds of “like,” and different systems for transmitting information.

The authors distinguish between limited heredity, where only a few states can be transmitted, and unlimited heredity, where an indefinitely large number of messages can be transmitted.

This distinction links genes, epigenetic marks, and language in one shimmering information-thread. 🧵

Stage 1: Simple autocatalytic systems

Autocatalysis means a molecule helps produce more molecules of the same kind. This is essential for growth, but not enough for true heredity. Heredity requires that if the original molecule changes, the system reproduces the changed type.

Some autocatalytic networks may have shown limited heredity, but only among a small number of molecular states.

Stage 2: Polynucleotide-like molecules and unlimited heredity

The origin of polynucleotide-like molecules was a decisive shift because they could encode open-ended digital information.

But the article emphasizes that this transition is hard. Problems include enantiomeric cross-inhibition, where mirror-image building blocks interfere with chain formation, and failure of template and copy to separate because they bind too strongly.

Short oligonucleotides may have been intermediate. Their shorter length allows spontaneous separation, but their growth dynamics can be parabolic rather than exponential. That produces “survival of everybody” rather than sharp survival of the fittest.

For full Darwinian competition, replicators need something closer to exponential growth.

Stage 3: The genetic code before translation

The article suggests that the genetic code may have begun before full translation. The key idea is that amino acids became attached to specific oligonucleotide handles.

The authors favor a scenario in which amino acids acted as coenzymes for ribozymes. Each amino acid had a trinucleotide “handle” allowing it to bind by base pairing. This could let different ribozymes recruit the same amino acid, gradually building the logic later used in the genetic code.

This avoids the “all at once” problem. Translation does not need to appear fully formed, wearing a tuxedo and carrying a ribosome.

Stage 4: Encoded protein synthesis

The origin of translation and encoded protein synthesis is treated briefly in the article, with details deferred to the authors’ larger book. But in the series of transitions, this is enormous: proteins become the main catalytic workforce, while nucleic acids specialize in information storage.

Stage 5: DNA replaces RNA

The article argues that DNA may have replaced RNA because DNA is chemically more stable. Thymine is more stable than uracil, and deoxyribose more stable than ribose.

The authors challenge a common argument that RNA lacks repair systems. In principle, damage repair could be chemically feasible in double-stranded RNA. Stability itself may have been the main advantage.

Stage 6: Epigenetic heredity

The authors then turn to heritable regulatory states. In prokaryotes and simple eukaryotes, methylation patterns can be transmitted through cell division. That means inheritance can depend not only on DNA sequence but also on gene-activity states.

This is central for development. Multicellular organisms need cells with the same genome to behave differently. A neuron and a liver cell are not different because they have different genes, but because they maintain different gene-expression states.

Figure 1c illustrates this idea with genes A, B, and C carrying heritable activity states, marked by asterisks.

Stage 7: Multicellular heredity

Animals, plants, and fungi evolved epigenetic inheritance systems with enough richness to support many differentiated cell types. The authors note that this happened three times, suggesting the transition may not have been extraordinarily difficult once the relevant epigenetic machinery existed.

Stage 8 and 9: Protolanguage and true language

The final heredity transition is cultural.

Proto-language in Homo erectus may have allowed limited communication without grammar. Human language, by contrast, has grammar and unlimited semantic representation. With finite vocabulary and rules, humans can generate indefinitely many meanings.

The authors compare this directly to the genetic code: finite components, infinite combinatorial potential.

They accept Chomsky’s argument that grammar is uniquely human and specific to language, but they criticize reluctance to think evolutionarily about grammar. They argue that intermediate forms are possible. A partial grammar can still be useful, just as a light-sensitive patch can be useful before a full eye evolves.

The article even discusses hereditary variation in linguistic competence, including a family with inherited difficulty automatically generating plurals and past tense. This suggests that grammar can be biologically dissected, much as development can.

The grand move here is bold: heredity includes genes, epigenetic states, and culture. Evolutionary transitions are information revolutions.