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A scientist for the rest of us
Whether infuriating sociobiologists or enchanting readers, Stephen Jay
Gould liked messes and knew how to make hard thought look like fun.
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By Andrew Brown

May 24, 2002 |  Stephen Jay Gould, who died on Monday, belonged to no
particular scientific sect and founded none. Almost all his battles were
fought on his own. But the happy elegance of his style and the
bewildering range of his interests allowed him to recruit the sympathies
of every benevolent, well-read humanist to his various causes. No wonder
he was hated so. He was the scientist for the rest of us. 

He gave as good as he got in his long feud with the "Darwinian
fundamentalists," as he called his opponents. This term, an inspired
piece of polemical mudslinging, showed that what his own invective
lacked in quantity, it made up in quality, since one of the defining
characteristics of the sociobiologists he was attacking was their rather
Victorian atheism, and their conviction that the worst sort of human
being in the world was a fundamentalist Christian. 

It's hard to think of any scientist who has managed to combine Gould's
professional excellence -- for you do not get to be a senior professor
at Harvard by being an industrious windbag -- with his gifts as a
popularizer. As a paleontologist, Gould dealt with an obscure family of
Bahamian land snails, and collaborated most famously with the trilobite
expert Niles Eldredge. As a popularizer, he wrote enchantingly about
subjects from bacteria to baseball. 

Perhaps the person he most resembled in this was Bertrand Russell, who
also spent his professional life on subjects of arcane difficulty,
increasingly isolated from the activities of his peers, and who earned
his living with high-class journalism and popular histories. Russell,
who won an unlikely Nobel prize for literature, was the better stylist
(and the bigger fool, as reading his essays on current affairs makes
clear today). But both men managed to make hard thought look easy and
fun. 

What made Gould unique, both as a scientist and as a popularizer of
science, was that he had a historian's mind and not an engineer's. He
liked mess, confusion and contradiction. Most scientists, in my
experience, are the opposite. They are engineers at heart. They think
the world is made up of puzzles, and somewhere out there is the one
correct solution to every puzzle. 

This is the spirit that has found astounding regularities in nature and
celebrated enormous triumphs in 20th century biology, culminating in the
discovery of the digital nature of the genetic code. It's not a
temperament confined to scientists: The philosopher Daniel Dennett's
book "Darwin's Dangerous Idea," which contains an exceptionally vicious
attack on Gould and his works, is a sparkling example of the engineer's
cast of mind. But it is most common among scientists, and perhaps
especially among population biologists, who look for mathematical
regularities in the flow of genes down generations. 

This was the kind of confidence that Gould spent his polemical life
trying to puncture. He knew equations; he could do statistics, but one
of the reasons for his popularity among nonscientists was surely his
belief that life could not be reduced to equations. In three places in
particular he attacked the belief that there were reliable equations for
everything. Perhaps the most deeply felt, and the most likely to be
wrong, was his attack on I.Q. as a measure of intelligence in any
interesting sense, in "The Mismeasure of Man." Controversy still roils
around that book, which was illuminated by the knowledge that the most
popular early use of I.Q. tests had been to think up ways to keep out
people like Gould's Jewish immigrant grandparents. 

Punctuated equilibrium, Gould's paleontological theory formulated with
Niles Eldredge, was a more subtle attack on the hegemony of equations.
What it says is that the gradual steady change that the equations of
population biologists predict would be happening all the time under the
gentle pressure of natural selection is not found in the fossil record
because it is not found in nature. 

Species, Gould believed, have an existence of their own, which cannot be
understood or calculated solely by looking at their genes. They have
births, deaths and descendants, and in between birth and death they are
stable for millions of years. He did not believe that the transitions
between species took place faster than Darwinism would predict, but
rather that they were rarer than the simple application of gradualist
theory would predict. 

Actually disentangling how much of this is controversial is an
extraordinarily complicated task. Obviously the fossil and historical
record shows that the emergence of new species is a jerky process, more
frequent at some times than others; but it is still not clear whether
these irregularities are just noise, or, as Gould believed, a signal of
deeper forces at work. But he posed the question and it hasn't gone away
yet. 

His greatest polemical triumph was his attack, with his friend Harvard
biology professor Richard C. Lewontin, on the idea that all the features
of the organisms we see around us are best understood as adaptations.
Using the examples of "spandrels" -- small curved triangles that appear
as a side effect when you build a dome around four arches, but which
were then exploited by Renaissance fresco painters -- they argued that
many features of organisms are there simply as unselected side effects
of some other feature that has itself been selected for. Not everything
we see in the world has been streamlined by natural selection. 

The deep strength of this argument is that it suggests how the
inefficiencies of natural selection can themselves provide the raw
material for more selection: The origins of birds' feathers were almost
certainly as devices to radiate heat. Their ability to shift air was
originally a spandrel of their radiating function, but one on which a
whole new set of functions could be built. 

All these ideas, and innumerable others, are developed in Gould's last
book -- and testament -- "The Structure of Evolutionary Theory." It was
published shortly before his death, though it remains unfinished in the
sense that it is 1,400 pages long, and if he had lived he would surely
have shortened it by half; it ranges over the whole of evolutionary
controversies from Darwin up to Gould. At one stage, he takes up the
cudgels against Daniel Dennett again, quoting Schiller, who first said,
"Against stupidity, the Gods themselves contend in vain." But he quotes
it in the original German, and that gives a measure of his breadth of
extra-scientific interest. He could be an intolerable showoff, but he
had done an enormous amount to show off about and he was almost
certainly the only guest voice on "The Simpsons" who would quote
Schiller in the original, to squelch an enemy. 
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