A fundamental question in evolutionary biology
is the evolution of ornament, especially sexual
ornament.
And one way to look at that—how that evolves—is
to ask, “Why are certain traits preferred?”
The peacock’s tail, or the song of a wood
thrush?
In The Origin of Species Charles Darwin proposed
that organisms evolved by natural selection
to become more and more adapted to their environment.
In proposing this mechanism Darwin articulated
the concept of “fitness,” which was an
aspect of the individual that allowed it to
further its own survival or fecundity.
It was like physical fitness: it was something
the individual could do in order to further
its survival.
However, later during the early 20th century
with the development of modern population
genetics, the idea of fitness, the concept
of fitness was redefined in an abstract, mathematical
way to mean “one’s relative contribution
of one’s genes to subsequent populations.”
In this case fitness incorporated both survival
and fecundity AND a differential reproductive
success—or natural selection AND sexual
selection.
This is okay, except that the new, revised
concept of fitness kept its romantic association
with the idea of adaptation by natural selection,
even though it was being applied to both survival
and mate choice, which Darwin saw as essentially
an aesthetic process.
So what that means is in the early 20th century
evolutionary biology and selection became
synonymous with natural selection.
This had a number of problems, which, for
example, it built right into the machinery
of evolutionary biology the idea that mate
choice is ALWAYS adaptive, or is (or should
be) about adaptation.
100 percent of evolutionary biologists from
about 1890 to 1938 were either ardent eugenicists
or happy fellow travelers—Full stop.
And that unfortunate past is really part of
our history as a discipline.
And I think evolutionary biology has a special
responsibility to scrutinize the intellectual
developments during that period in the way
in which those concepts influence the way
we think about evolution today.
Animals have an opportunity for sensory perception,
cognitive evaluation, and choice, and based
on their choices certain kinds of ornament
will evolve.
According to the beauty happens theory, beauty
evolves merely because it’s preferred.
And what that means is that in a population
mate choice will create some norm, some standard
that is preferred within the population.
But also that standard is unstable over time;
it can change.
Now, this theory “Beauty Happens” goes
back to Charles Darwin, who proposed after
The Origin of Species an alternative or new
theory for the evolution of ornament through
mate choice or sexual selection.
When Darwin proposed that mate choice was
a force in evolution—back in the Victorian
era—the idea was a big loser among his colleagues.
They were very skeptical that animals could
be even capable of choice, let alone the kind
of aesthetic judgments that Darwin proposed.
Under the Wallacian view, all beauty is merely
another kind of practical utility.
That beauty, like the peacock’s tail, is
preferred because it indicates something about
that individual: either that he has good genes,
or a good diet, or no sexually transmitted
diseases—all sorts of things that mates
need to know.
The challenge, of course, is to try to figure
out what’s actually happening in nature.
Modern evolutionary biologists are quite comfortable
with the idea that animals are making choices,
yet they are still by and large confident
that the kinds of choices that animals make
will ALWAYS be controlled by or determined
by natural selection, that is, that mate choice
will ultimately lead to the evolution of adaptive—or
“honest”—ornaments.
This flattening or oversimplification of the
Darwinian worldview directly contributed to
the eugenic history of evolutionary biology.
That is, during the late 19th and early 20th
century, 100 percent of evolutionary biologists
believed that human diversity had evolved
as a result of adaptation to diversity of
environments—and this meant that human populations,
ethnic groups and races were actually adapted
to different environments in a “hierarchy
of quality”.
This of course was—this eugenic theory actually
failed to be supported and has been scientifically
rejected, and yet aspects of the “logic”
of eugenics were built into the early or fundamental
concepts of modern evolutionary biology through
the concept of fitness.
So, how do we proceed forward?
I think the best way is to define natural
selection and sexual selection as distinct
mechanisms, sometimes interacting.
This is a return to the Darwinian structure
of evolutionary biology, and I think it’s
one that actually will inoculate evolutionary
biology from its eugenic roots by essentially
uncoupling mate choice from the definition
of adaptation.
I think of this like a spinning top, mate
choice creates the forces that allows the
top to spin and stand on its own in one place,
but over time with small disruptions the top
can skitter from one place or one direction
or another.
So what that means is as species form they
tend to evolve new and different varieties
of beauty, each more complex than the last.
Like a spinning top, if you spin it 10,000
times each time it will arrive at a different
place.
And that’s one way in which I think the
beauty happens theory looks a lot like nature
itself, where different species all have different
ideas about what’s beautiful.
