Stephen Jay Gould, "What Does the Dreaded 'E' Word Mean
Anyway? A Reverie for the Opening of the New Hayden Planetarium"
Perhaps more than any other contemporary American scientist, Stephen Jay Gould committed himself to communicating the goals, processes, and achievements of science to the public. Gould's high visibility, distinctive critical voice, and marked enthusiasm for making science accessible to the general public led him to contribute to debates surrounding creationist science, evolutionary psychology, and biological determinations of race and intelligence. The essay included here, "What Does the Dreaded 'E' Word Mean, Anyway?" is part of Gould's lifelong project of explaining Darwin's evolutionary theory, a project that involved clarifying what "survival of the fittest" means and addressing the notion that evolutionary development involves progress toward perfection. As Gould's opening discussion of the Kansas City school board's treatment of evolutionary theory shows, Darwin's ideas and their significance remain largely misunderstood to this day, more than 150 years after they were first voiced.
Undoubtedly the most prolific scientific writer of the twentieth century, Gould published more than twenty books, including The Mismeasure of Man (1982), which criticized pseudoscientific justifications for racism and won a National Book Critics Circle Award; The Panda's Thumb (1980), which won the American Book Award; and Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History (1990), which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and winner of the Science Book Prize. Just prior to his death in 2002, Gould published his magnum opus, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory, which was described in a review in Scientific American as "a monumental work, both in size (1,400-plus pages) and in scope-it sets out to do nothing less than reformulate Darwin's theory of evolution." Professor of Geology and Zoology at Harvard University and also the curator of the Invertebrate Paleontology collection at the Museum of Comparative Zoology there, Gould was the recipient of many academic awards and distinctions, including a MacArthur "Genius Grant," the Glenn T. Seaborg Award for contribution to public interest in science, the Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of Biology Teachers, and the Distinguished Service Award from the American Humanists Association.
Gould wrote that "Humans are not the end result of predictable evolutionary progress, but rather a fortuitous cosmic afterthought, a tiny little twig on the enormously arborescent bush of life, which if replanted from seed, would almost surely not grow this twig again." At first glance such a worldview may appear rather bleak. But Gould saw the emergence of homo sapiens as wonderful-literally an occasion for wonder-precisely because it uniquely expressed the forces that are at work throughout the universe in every variety of living thing.
"What does the dreaded 'E'
word mean anyway? A Reverie for the Opening of the New Hayden Planetarium."
Natural History, 1999.
Digital image drawn from the
Free
Thought web site. Quotation and biographical information drawn from
Stephen Jay Gould's interview by AnnOnLine,
9 October 1996.
Links to Explore:
The "G
Files": offers a comprehensive, hyper-linked catalogue of Gould's
contributions to public debates about evolution. To hear Gould discuss
his ideas about human evolution, go to the
Internet radio interview he did with Ann On Line. (Note: In
order to hear Gould speak, be sure to listen to the second of the two
audio files.)
The Cambrian
Period: provides an introduction to the "Cambrian explosion."
Update
on the Kansas City School Board: the latest news on Kansas City's
ongoing effort to decide what role the subject of evolution should play
in the public school curricula. Site includes links to background stories
covering the rise of this effort to bring creationism into the schools.
The Electronic Universe: an educational
outreach site maintained by Professor Greg Bothun, a physics professor
at the University of Oregon. Includes a link to Stellar
Evolution, a site that explains the main star sequence, thereby illustrating
the difference between stellar evolution and biological evolution.
Stephen
J. Gould (1941-2002): an obituary celebrating Gould's life work and
expressing feelings of tremendous loss within the scientific community.
Questions for Learning:
-
The "G
Files" offers a wide array of materials related to Gould,
including his Stanford
Presidential Lectures. After you've read through these materials,
how does Gould's discussion of Darwin in "What does the dreaded
'E' word mean anyway?" relate to Gould's discussion of
"Darwinian fundamentalism"? What does it mean to describe
someone as a "Darwinist" or an "Anti-Darwinist?"
-
Gould's essay focuses on an event that is likely to be unfamiliar
to readers who don't have an active interest in geology: "the
Cambrian explosion." The
Cambrian Period web site provides an introduction to this period
and to the explosion that Gould discusses. Why is the explosion significant
to Gould? What lesson about evolution does Gould take from this period?
-
Gould's essay begins with a discussion of the Kansas City School
Board's decision to place an emphasis on creationism in the curriculum.
A year after Gould's article was been published, Kansas City rescinded
the actions of the school board. After you've visited the site updating
events on
the Kansas City School Board, what would you say has motivated
this change? Have the voters come to understand the distinctions that
Gould has made in his essay? Have they rejected the notion of "creationism"?
Or has something else altogether motivated this decision to return
evolution to the curriculum?
-
For the non-specialist, Gould's discussion of stellar evolution can
seem rather abstract. Visit the Stellar
Evolution site and work your way through Professor Bothun's explanation
of how stars evolve. Does Gould's discussion of the difference between
how astronomers think of evolution and how biologists think of evolution
hold?
Questions for Connecting:
-
In "What does the dreaded 'E' word mean, anyway?" Stephen Jay Gould
provides an extended discussion of what the word "evolution" means
in the life sciences. In "Playing God in the Garden," Michael Pollan
discusses genetic engineering and the invention of the NewLeaf potato.
Does genetic engineering disrupt the evolutionary process Gould describes
or does it participate in that evolutionary process? Does Gould's
argument suggest that we should be concerned about genetic engineering
or that there is nothing to worry about? That is, does the definition
of evolution used in the life sciences put to rest the concerns Pollan
has raised about genetic engineering or does it heighten those concerns?
For additional connecting suggestions, please go to assignments
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