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Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould (/ɡld/; September 10, 1941 – May 20, 2002) was an American paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and historian of science. He was one of the most influential and widely read authors of popular science of his generation.[1] Gould spent most of his career teaching at Harvard University and working at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. In 1996, Gould was hired as the Vincent Astor Visiting Research Professor of Biology at New York University, after which he divided his time teaching between there and Harvard.

Stephen Jay Gould
Born(1941-09-10)September 10, 1941
DiedMay 20, 2002(2002-05-20) (aged 60)
Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Education
Known for
Spouses
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPaleontology, evolutionary biology, history of science
Institutions
ThesisPleistocene and Recent History of the Subgenus Poecilozonites (Poecilozonites) (Gastropoda: Pulmonata) in Bermuda: An Evolutionary Microcosm (1967)
Doctoral advisors
Doctoral students
Signature

Gould's most significant contribution to evolutionary biology was the theory of punctuated equilibrium[2] developed with Niles Eldredge in 1972.[3] The theory proposes that most evolution is characterized by long periods of evolutionary stability, infrequently punctuated by swift periods of branching speciation. The theory was contrasted against phyletic gradualism, the popular idea that evolutionary change is marked by a pattern of smooth and continuous change in the fossil record.[4]

Most of Gould's empirical research was based on the land snail genera Poecilozonites and Cerion. He also made important contributions to evolutionary developmental biology, receiving broad professional recognition for his book Ontogeny and Phylogeny.[5] In evolutionary theory he opposed strict selectionism, sociobiology as applied to humans, and evolutionary psychology. He campaigned against creationism and proposed that science and religion should be considered two distinct fields (or "non-overlapping magisteria") whose authorities do not overlap.[6]

Gould was known by the general public mainly for his 300 popular essays in Natural History magazine,[7] and his numerous books written for both the specialist and non-specialist. In April 2000, the US Library of Congress named him a "Living Legend".[8][9]

Biography

 
Gould's inspiration to become a paleontologist: T. rex specimen AMNH 5027, American Museum of Natural History, New York City

Stephen Jay Gould was born in Queens, New York, on September 10, 1941. His father Leonard was a court stenographer and a World War II veteran in the United States Navy. His mother Eleanor was an artist, whose parents were Jewish immigrants living and working in the city's Garment District.[10] Gould and his younger brother Peter were raised in Bayside, a middle-class neighborhood in the northeastern section of Queens.[11] He attended P.S. 26 elementary school and graduated from Jamaica High School.[12]

When Gould was five years old his father took him to the Hall of Dinosaurs in the American Museum of Natural History, where he first encountered Tyrannosaurus rex. "I had no idea there were such things—I was awestruck," Gould once recalled.[13] It was in that moment that he decided to become a paleontologist.[14]

Raised in a secular Jewish home, Gould did not formally practice religion and preferred to be called an agnostic.[15] When asked directly if he was an agnostic in Skeptic magazine, he responded:

If you absolutely forced me to bet on the existence of a conventional anthropomorphic deity, of course I'd bet no. But, basically, Huxley was right when he said that agnosticism is the only honorable position because we really cannot know. And that's right. I'd be real surprised if there turned out to be a conventional God.

Though he "had been brought up by a Marxist father"[16] he stated that his father's politics were "very different" from his own.[17] In describing his own political views, he has said they "tend to the left of center."[18] According to Gould the most influential political books he read were C. Wright Mills' The Power Elite and the political writings of Noam Chomsky.[18]

While attending Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio in the early 1960s, Gould was active in the civil rights movement and often campaigned for social justice.[19] When he attended the University of Leeds as a visiting undergraduate, he organized weekly demonstrations outside a Bradford dance hall which refused to admit black people. Gould continued these demonstrations until the policy was revoked.[20] Throughout his career and writings, he spoke out against cultural oppression in all its forms, especially what he saw as the pseudoscience used in the service of racism and sexism.[21]

Interspersed throughout his scientific essays for Natural History magazine, Gould frequently referred to his non-scientific interests and pastimes. As a boy he collected baseball cards and remained an avid New York Yankees fan throughout his life.[22] As an adult he was fond of science fiction movies, but often lamented their poor storytelling and presentation of science.[23] His other interests included singing baritone in the Boston Cecilia, and he was a great aficionado of Gilbert and Sullivan operas.[24] He collected rare antiquarian books, possessed an enthusiasm for architecture, and delighted in city walks. He often traveled to Europe, and spoke French, German, Russian, and Italian. He sometimes alluded ruefully to his tendency to put on weight.[25]

Marriage and family

Gould married artist Deborah Lee on October 3, 1965.[12] Gould met Lee while they were students together at Antioch College.[13] They had two sons, Jesse and Ethan, and were married for 30 years.[26] His second marriage in 1995 was to artist and sculptor Rhonda Roland Shearer.[12]

First bout of cancer

In July 1982 Gould was diagnosed with peritoneal mesothelioma, a deadly form of cancer affecting the abdominal lining (the peritoneum). This cancer is frequently found in people who have ingested or inhaled asbestos fibers, a mineral which was used in the construction of Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology.[27][28] After a difficult two-year recovery, Gould published a column for Discover magazine in 1985 titled "The Median Isn't the Message", which discusses his reaction to reading that "mesothelioma is incurable, with a median mortality of only eight months after discovery."[29] In his essay, he describes the actual significance behind this fact, and his relief upon recognizing that statistical averages are useful abstractions, and by themselves do not encompass "our actual world of variation, shadings, and continua."[29]

Gould was also an advocate of medical cannabis. When undergoing his cancer treatments he smoked marijuana to help alleviate the long periods of intense and uncontrollable nausea. According to Gould, the drug had a "most important effect" on his eventual recovery. He later complained that he could not understand how "any humane person would withhold such a beneficial substance from people in such great need simply because others use it for different purposes."[30] On August 5, 1998, Gould's testimony assisted in the successful lawsuit of HIV activist Jim Wakeford, who sued the Government of Canada for the right to cultivate, possess, and use marijuana for medical purposes.[31]

Final illness and death

In February 2002, a 3-centimetre (1.2 in) lesion was found on Gould's chest radiograph, and oncologists diagnosed him with stage IV cancer. Gould died 10 weeks later on May 20, 2002, from a metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung, an aggressive form of cancer which had already spread to his brain, liver, and spleen.[32] This cancer was unrelated to his previous bout of abdominal cancer in 1982.[33] He died in his home "in a bed set up in the library of his SoHo loft, surrounded by his wife Rhonda, his mother Eleanor, and the many books he loved."[34]

Scientific career

Gould began his higher education at Antioch College, graduating with a double major in geology and philosophy in 1963.[35] During this time, he also studied at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom.[36] After completing graduate work at Columbia University in 1967 under the guidance of Norman Newell,[37] he was immediately hired by Harvard University where he worked until the end of his life (1967–2002). In 1973, Harvard promoted him to professor of geology and curator of invertebrate paleontology at the institution's Museum of Comparative Zoology.[1]

In 1982, Harvard awarded him the title of Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology. That same year, he received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[38] In 1983, he was awarded a fellowship at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, where he later served as president (1999–2001). The AAAS news release cited his "numerous contributions to both scientific progress and the public understanding of science."[39] He also served as president of the Paleontological Society (1985–1986) and of the Society for the Study of Evolution (1990–1991).[1]

In 1989, Gould was elected into the body of the National Academy of Sciences. Through 1996–2002 Gould was Vincent Astor Visiting Research Professor of Biology at New York University. In 2001, the American Humanist Association named him the Humanist of the Year for his lifetime of work.[1] In 2008, he was posthumously awarded the Darwin–Wallace Medal, along with 12 other recipients. (Until 2008, this medal had been awarded every 50 years by the Linnean Society of London.[40])

Punctuated equilibrium

 
The punctuated equilibrium model (above) consists of morphological stability followed by episodic bursts of evolutionary change via rapid cladogenesis. It is contrasted (below) to phyletic gradualism, a more gradual, continuous model of evolution.

Early in his career, Gould and his colleague Niles Eldredge developed the theory of punctuated equilibrium, which describes the rate of speciation in the fossil record as occurring relatively rapidly, which then alternates to a longer period of evolutionary stability.[3] It was Gould who coined the term "punctuated equilibria" though the theory was originally presented by Eldredge in his doctoral dissertation on Devonian trilobites and his article published the previous year on allopatric speciation.[41]

According to Gould, punctuated equilibrium revised a key pillar "in the central logic of Darwinian theory."[17] Some evolutionary biologists have argued that while punctuated equilibrium was "of great interest to biology generally,"[42] it merely modified neo-Darwinism in a manner that was fully compatible with what had been known before.[43] Other biologists emphasize the theoretical novelty of punctuated equilibrium, and argued that evolutionary stasis had been "unexpected by most evolutionary biologists" and "had a major impact on paleontology and evolutionary biology."[44]

Comparisons were made to George Gaylord Simpson's work in Tempo and Mode in Evolution (1941), in which he also illustrated relatively sudden changes along evolutionary lines. Simpson describes the paleontological record as being characterized by predominantly gradual change (which he termed horotely), although he also documented examples of slow (bradytely), and rapid (tachytely) rates of evolution. Punctuated equilibrium and phyletic gradualism are not mutually exclusive (as Simpson's work demonstrates), and examples of each have been documented in different lineages. The debate between these two models is often misunderstood by non-scientists, and according to Richard Dawkins has been oversold by the media.[45] Some critics jokingly referred to the theory of punctuated equilibrium as "evolution by jerks",[46] which prompted Gould to describe phyletic gradualism as "evolution by creeps."[47]

Evolutionary developmental biology

Gould made significant contributions to evolutionary developmental biology,[48] especially in his work Ontogeny and Phylogeny.[35] In this book he emphasized the process of heterochrony, which encompasses two distinct processes: neoteny and terminal additions. Neoteny is the process where ontogeny is slowed down and the organism does not reach the end of its development. Terminal addition is the process by which an organism adds to its development by speeding and shortening earlier stages in the developmental process. Gould's influence in the field of evolutionary developmental biology continues to be seen today in areas such as the evolution of feathers.[49]

Selectionism and sociobiology

Gould was a champion of biological constraints, internal limitations upon developmental pathways, as well as other non-selectionist forces in evolution. Rather than direct adaptations, he considered many higher functions of the human brain to be the unintended side consequence of natural selection.[50] To describe such co-opted features, he coined the term exaptation with paleontologist Elisabeth Vrba.[51] Gould believed this feature of human mentality undermines an essential premise of human sociobiology and evolutionary psychology.[citation needed]

Against Sociobiology

In 1975, Gould's Harvard colleague E. O. Wilson introduced his analysis of animal behavior (including human behavior) based on a sociobiological framework that suggested that many social behaviors have a strong evolutionary basis.[52] In response, Gould, Richard Lewontin, and others from the Boston area wrote the subsequently well-referenced letter to The New York Review of Books entitled, "Against 'Sociobiology'". This open letter criticized Wilson's notion of a "deterministic view of human society and human action."[53]

But Gould did not rule out sociobiological explanations for many aspects of animal behavior, and later wrote: "Sociobiologists have broadened their range of selective stories by invoking concepts of inclusive fitness and kin selection to solve (successfully I think) the vexatious problem of altruism—previously the greatest stumbling block to a Darwinian theory of social behavior... Here sociobiology has had and will continue to have success. And here I wish it well. For it represents an extension of basic Darwinism to a realm where it should apply."[54]

Spandrels and the Panglossian paradigm

 
A spandrel from the Holy Trinity Church in Fulnek, Czech Republic.

With Richard Lewontin, Gould wrote an influential 1979 paper entitled, "The Spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian Paradigm",[50] which introduced the architectural term "spandrel" into evolutionary biology. In architecture, a spandrel is a triangular space which exists over the haunches of an arch.[55][56] Spandrels—more often called pendentives in this context—are found particularly in classical architecture, especially Byzantine and Renaissance churches.

When visiting Venice in 1978, Gould noted that the spandrels of the San Marco cathedral, while quite beautiful, were not spaces planned by the architect. Rather the spaces arise as "necessary architectural byproducts of mounting a dome on rounded arches." Gould and Lewontin thus defined "spandrels" in the evolutionary biology context to mean any biological feature of an organism that arises as a necessary side consequence of other features, which is not directly selected for by natural selection. Proposed examples include the "masculinized genitalia in female hyenas, exaptive use of an umbilicus as a brooding chamber by snails, the shoulder hump of the giant Irish deer, and several key features of human mentality."[57]

In Voltaire's Candide, Dr. Pangloss is portrayed as a clueless scholar who, despite the evidence, insists that "all is for the best in this best of all possible worlds". Gould and Lewontin asserted that it is Panglossian for evolutionary biologists to view all traits as atomized things that had been naturally selected for, and criticised biologists for not granting theoretical space to other causes, such as phyletic and developmental constraints. The relative frequency of spandrels, so defined, versus adaptive features in nature, remains a controversial topic in evolutionary biology.[58][59][60] An illustrative example of Gould's approach can be found in Elisabeth Lloyd's case study suggesting that the female orgasm is a by-product of shared developmental pathways.[61] Gould also wrote on this topic in his essay "Male Nipples and Clitoral Ripples," prompted by Lloyd's earlier work.[62]

Gould was criticized by philosopher Daniel Dennett for using the term spandrel instead of pendentive,[63] a spandrel that curves across a right angle to support a dome. Robert Mark, a professor of civil engineering at Princeton, offered his expertise in the pages of American Scientist, noting that these definitions are often misunderstood in architectural theory. Mark concluded, "Gould and Lewontin's misapplication of the term spandrel for pendentive perhaps implies a wider latitude of design choice than they intended for their analogy. But Dennett's critique of the architectural basis of the analogy goes even further astray because he slights the technical rationale of the architectural elements in question."[56]

Evolutionary progress

Gould favored the argument that evolution has no inherent drive towards long-term "progress". Uncritical commentaries often portray evolution as a ladder of progress, leading towards bigger, faster, and smarter organisms, the assumption being that evolution is somehow driving organisms to get more complex and ultimately more like humankind. Gould argued that evolution's drive was not towards complexity, but towards diversification. Because life is constrained to begin with a simple starting point (like bacteria), any diversity resulting from this start, by random walk, will have a skewed distribution and therefore be perceived to move in the direction of higher complexity. But life, Gould argued, can also easily adapt towards simplification, as is often the case with parasites.[64]

In a review of Full House, Richard Dawkins approved of Gould's general argument, but suggested that he saw evidence of a "tendency for lineages to improve cumulatively their adaptive fit to their particular way of life, by increasing the numbers of features which combine together in adaptive complexes. ... By this definition, adaptive evolution is not just incidentally progressive, it is deeply, dyed-in-the-wool, indispensably progressive."[65]

Cultural evolution

Gould's arguments towards progress in evolutionary biology did not extend towards a notion of progress in general or notions of cultural evolution. In Full House, Gould compares two notions of progress against one another. While the first concept of progress, evolutionary progress, is argued to be invalid for a number of biological considerations, Gould permits that evolution may operate in human cultural evolution through a Lamarckian mechanism. Gould goes on to argue that the disappearance of the 0.400 batting average in baseball is paradoxically due to the inclusion of better players in the league, rather than players becoming worse over time. In his view such a process is likely reflective in a number of cultural phenomena including sports, the visual arts, and music where, unlike in biological systems, the realm of aesthetic possibilities is constrained by a "right wall" of human limits and aesthetic preferences.[66] Gould later goes on to state that his arguments for biological evolution should not be applied to cultural change lest they be employed by, "so-called ‘political correctness’ as a doctrine that celebrates all indigenous practice, and therefore permits no distinctions, judgements, or analyses."[64]

Cladistics

Gould never embraced cladistics as a method of investigating evolutionary lineages and process, possibly because he was concerned that such investigations would lead to neglect of the details in historical biology, which he considered all-important. In the early 1990s this led him into a debate with Derek Briggs, who had begun to apply quantitative cladistic techniques to the Burgess Shale fossils, about the methods to be used in interpreting these fossils.[67] Around this time cladistics rapidly became the dominant method of classification in evolutionary biology. Inexpensive but increasingly powerful personal computers made it possible to process large quantities of data about organisms and their characteristics. Around the same time the development of effective polymerase chain reaction techniques made it possible to apply cladistic methods of analysis to biochemical and genetic features as well.[68]

Technical work on land snails

 
Cerion shells from San Salvador Island, Bahamas.

Most of Gould's empirical research pertained to land snails. He focused his early work on the Bermudian genus Poecilozonites, while his later work concentrated on the West Indian genus Cerion. According to Gould "Cerion is the land snail of maximal diversity in form throughout the entire world. There are 600 described species of this single genus. In fact, they're not really species, they all interbreed, but the names exist to express a real phenomenon which is this incredible morphological diversity. Some are shaped like golf balls, some are shaped like pencils. ... Now my main subject is the evolution of form, and the problem of how it is that you can get this diversity amid so little genetic difference, so far as we can tell, is a very interesting one. And if we could solve this we'd learn something general about the evolution of form."[69]

Given Cerion's extensive geographic diversity, Gould later lamented that if Christopher Columbus had only catalogued a single Cerion it would have ended the scholarly debate about which island Columbus had first set foot on in America.[70]

Influence

Gould is one of the most frequently cited scientists in the field of evolutionary theory. His 1979 "spandrels" paper has been cited more than 5,000 times.[71] In Paleobiology—the flagship journal of his own speciality—only Charles Darwin and George Gaylord Simpson have been cited more often.[72] Gould was also a considerably respected historian of science. Historian Ronald Numbers has been quoted as saying: "I can't say much about Gould's strengths as a scientist, but for a long time I've regarded him as the second most influential historian of science (next to Thomas Kuhn)."[73]

The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

Shortly before his death, Gould published The Structure of Evolutionary Theory (2002), a long treatise recapitulating his version of modern evolutionary theory. In an interview for the Dutch TV series Of Beauty and Consolation Gould remarked, "In a couple of years I will be able to gather in one volume my view of how evolution works. It is to me a great consolation because it represents the putting together of a lifetime of thinking into one source. That book will never be particularly widely read. It's going to be far too long, and it's only for a few thousand professionals—very different from my popular science writings—but it is of greater consolation to me because it is a chance to put into one place a whole way of thinking about evolution that I've struggled with all my life."[74]

As a public figure

Gould became widely known through his popular essays on evolution in the Natural History magazine. His essays were published in a series entitled This View of Life (a phrase from the concluding paragraph of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species) from January 1974 to January 2001, amounting to a continuous publication of 300 essays.[7] Many of his essays were reprinted in collected volumes that became bestselling books such as Ever Since Darwin and The Panda's Thumb, Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes, and The Flamingo's Smile.

A passionate advocate of evolutionary theory, Gould wrote prolifically on the subject, trying to communicate his understanding of contemporary evolutionary biology to a wide audience. A recurring theme in his writings is the history and development of pre-evolutionary and evolutionary thought. He was also an enthusiastic baseball fan and sabermetrician (analyst of baseball statistics), and made frequent reference to the sport in his essays. Many of his baseball essays were anthologized in his posthumously published book Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville (2003).[22]

Although a self-described Darwinist, Gould's emphasis was less gradualist and reductionist than most neo-Darwinists. He fiercely opposed many aspects of sociobiology and its intellectual descendant evolutionary psychology. He devoted considerable time to fighting against creationism, creation science, and intelligent design. Most notably, Gould provided expert testimony against the equal-time creationism law in McLean v. Arkansas. Gould later developed the term "non-overlapping magisteria" (NOMA) to describe how, in his view, science and religion should not comment on each other's realm. Gould went on to develop this idea in some detail, particularly in the books Rocks of Ages (1999) and The Hedgehog, the Fox, and the Magister's Pox (2003). In a 1982 essay for Natural History Gould wrote:

Our failure to discern a universal good does not record any lack of insight or ingenuity, but merely demonstrates that nature contains no moral messages framed in human terms. Morality is a subject for philosophers, theologians, students of the humanities, indeed for all thinking people. The answers will not be read passively from nature; they do not, and cannot, arise from the data of science. The factual state of the world does not teach us how we, with our powers for good and evil, should alter or preserve it in the most ethical manner.[75]

An anti-evolution petition drafted by the Discovery Institute inspired the National Center for Science Education to create a pro-evolution counterpart called "Project Steve," which is named in Gould's honor.[76] In 2011 the executive council of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) selected Gould for inclusion in CSI's "Pantheon of Skeptics" created to remember the legacy of deceased CSI fellows and their contributions to the cause of scientific skepticism.[77]

Gould also became a noted public face of science, often appearing on television. In 1984 Gould received his own NOVA special on PBS.[78] Other appearances included interviews on CNN's Crossfire and Talkback Live,[79] NBC's The Today Show, and regular appearances on PBS's Charlie Rose show. Gould was also a guest in all seven episodes of the Dutch talk series A Glorious Accident, in which he appeared with his close friend Oliver Sacks.[80]

Gould was featured prominently as a guest in Ken Burns's PBS documentary Baseball, as well as PBS's Evolution series. Gould was also on the Board of Advisers to the influential Children's Television Workshop television show 3-2-1 Contact, where he made frequent guest appearances.[81]

Since 2013, Gould has been listed on the Advisory Council of the National Center for Science Education.[82]

In 1997, he voiced a cartoon version of himself on the television series The Simpsons. In the episode "Lisa the Skeptic", Lisa finds a skeleton that many people believe is an apocalyptic angel. Lisa contacts Gould and asks him to test the skeleton's DNA. The fossil is discovered to be a marketing gimmick for a new mall.[83] During production, the only phrase Gould objected to was a line in the script that introduced him as the "world's most brilliant paleontologist".[84] In 2002, the show paid tribute to Gould after his death, dedicating the season 13 finale to his memory. Gould had died two days before the episode aired.

The "Darwin Wars"

Gould received many accolades for his scholarly work and popular expositions of natural history,[85] but a number of biologists felt his public presentations were out of step with mainstream evolutionary thinking.[86] The public debates between Gould's supporters and detractors have been so quarrelsome that they have been dubbed "The Darwin Wars" by several commentators.[87][88]

John Maynard Smith, the eminent British evolutionary biologist, was among Gould's strongest critics. Maynard Smith thought that Gould misjudged the vital role of adaptation in biology, and was critical of Gould's acceptance of species selection as a major component of biological evolution.[89] In a review of Daniel Dennett's book Darwin's Dangerous Idea, Maynard Smith wrote that Gould "is giving non-biologists a largely false picture of the state of evolutionary theory."[90] But Maynard Smith was not consistently negative, writing in a review of The Panda's Thumb that "Stephen Gould is the best writer of popular science now active... Often he infuriates me, but I hope he will go right on writing essays like these."[91] Maynard Smith was also among those who welcomed Gould's reinvigoration of evolutionary paleontology.[43]

One reason for criticism was that Gould appeared to be presenting his ideas as a revolutionary way of understanding evolution, and argued for the importance of mechanisms other than natural selection, mechanisms which he believed had been ignored by many professional evolutionists. As a result, many non-specialists sometimes inferred from his early writings that Darwinian explanations had been proven to be unscientific (which Gould never tried to imply). Along with many other researchers in the field, Gould's works were sometimes deliberately taken out of context by creationists as "proof" that scientists no longer understood how organisms evolved.[92] Gould himself corrected some of these misinterpretations and distortions of his writings in later works.[93]

The conflicts between Richard Dawkins and Gould were popularized by philosopher Kim Sterelny in his 2001 book Dawkins vs. Gould. Sterelny documents their disagreements over theoretical issues, including the prominence of gene selection in evolution. Dawkins argues that natural selection is best understood as competition among genes (or replicators), while Gould advocated multi-level selection, which includes selection amongst genes, nucleic acid sequences, cell lineages, organisms, demes, species, and clades.[88]

Dawkins accused Gould of deliberately underplaying the differences between rapid gradualism and macromutation in his published accounts of punctuated equilibrium.[94] He also devoted entire chapters to critiquing Gould's account of evolution in his books The Blind Watchmaker and Unweaving the Rainbow, as did Daniel Dennett in his 1995 book Darwin's Dangerous Idea. Other biologists contemporary to Gould went further, as in the case of Robert Trivers who classified it as "intellectual fraud".[95]

Cambrian fauna

In his book Wonderful Life (1989) Gould famously described the Cambrian fauna of the Burgess Shale, emphasizing their bizarre anatomical designs, their sudden appearance, and the role chance played in determining which members survived. He used the Cambrian fauna as an example of the role contingency has in shaping the broader pattern of evolution.

His view of contingency was criticized by Simon Conway Morris in his 1998 book The Crucible of Creation.[96] Conway Morris stressed members of the Cambrian fauna that resemble modern taxa. He also argued that convergent evolution has a tendency to produce "similarities of organization" and that the forms of life are restricted and channelled. In his book Life's Solution (2003) Conway Morris argued that the appearance of human-like animals is also likely.[97] Paleontologist Richard Fortey noted that prior to the release of Wonderful Life, Conway Morris shared a similar thesis to Gould's, but after Wonderful Life Conway Morris revised his interpretation and adopted a more deterministic position on the history of life.[98]

Paleontologists Derek Briggs and Richard Fortey have also argued that much of the Cambrian fauna may be regarded as stem groups of living taxa,[99] though this is still a subject of intense research and debate, and the relationship of many Cambrian taxa to modern phyla has not been established in the eyes of many palaeontologists.[100]

Richard Dawkins disagrees with the view that new phyla suddenly appeared in the Cambrian, arguing that for a new phylum "to spring into existence, what actually has to happen on the ground is that a child is born which suddenly, out of the blue, is as different from its parents as a snail is from an earthworm. No zoologist who thinks through the implications, not even the most ardent saltationist, has ever supported any such notion."[101] In the Structure of Evolutionary Theory Gould stresses the difference between phyletic splitting and large anatomical transitions, noting that the two events may be separated by millions of years. Gould argues that no paleontologist regards the Cambrian explosion "as a genealogical event—that is as the actual time of initial splitting", but rather it "marks an anatomical transition in the overt phenotypes of bilaterian organisms."[102]

Opposition to sociobiology and evolutionary psychology

Gould also had a long-running public feud with E. O. Wilson and other evolutionary biologists concerning the disciplines of human sociobiology and evolutionary psychology, both of which Gould and Lewontin opposed, but which Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and Steven Pinker advocated.[103] These debates reached their climax in the 1970s, and included strong opposition from groups such as the Sociobiology Study Group and Science for the People.[104] Pinker accuses Gould, Lewontin, and other opponents of evolutionary psychology of being "radical scientists", whose stance on human nature is influenced by politics rather than science.[105] Gould stated that he made "no attribution of motive in Wilson's or anyone else's case" but cautioned that all human beings are influenced, especially unconsciously, by our personal expectations and biases. He wrote:

I grew up in a family with a tradition of participation in campaigns for social justice, and I was active, as a student, in the civil rights movement at a time of great excitement and success in the early 1960s. Scholars are often wary of citing such commitments. … [but] it is dangerous for a scholar even to imagine that he might attain complete neutrality, for then one stops being vigilant about personal preferences and their influences—and then one truly falls victim to the dictates of prejudice. Objectivity must be operationally defined as fair treatment of data, not absence of preference.[106]

Gould's primary criticism held that human sociobiological explanations lacked evidential support, and argued that adaptive behaviors are frequently assumed to be genetic for no other reason than their supposed universality, or their adaptive nature. Gould emphasized that adaptive behaviors can be passed on through culture as well, and either hypothesis is equally plausible.[107] Gould did not deny the relevance of biology to human nature, but reframed the debate as "biological potentiality vs. biological determinism." Gould stated that the human brain allows for a wide range of behaviors. Its flexibility "permits us to be aggressive or peaceful, dominant or submissive, spiteful or generous… Violence, sexism, and general nastiness are biological since they represent one subset of a possible range of behaviors. But peacefulness, equality, and kindness are just as biological—and we may see their influence increase if we can create social structures that permit them to flourish."[107]

The Mismeasure of Man

Gould was the author of The Mismeasure of Man (1981), a history and inquiry of psychometrics and intelligence testing, generating perhaps the greatest controversy of all his books and receiving both widespread praise[108] and extensive criticism.[109][110][111] Gould investigated the methods of nineteenth century craniometry, as well as the history of psychological testing. Gould wrote that both theories developed from an unfounded belief in biological determinism, the view that "social and economic differences between human groups—primarily races, classes, and sexes—arise from inherited, inborn distinctions and that society, in this sense, is an accurate reflection of biology."[112] The book was reprinted in 1996 with the addition of a new foreword and a critical review of The Bell Curve.

In 2011, a study conducted by six anthropologists criticized Gould's claim that Samuel Morton unconsciously manipulated his skull measurements, arguing that his analysis of Morton was influenced by his opposition to racism.[113][114][115] The group's paper was reviewed in an editorial in the journal Nature, which pointed out that the paper's authors might have been influenced by their own motivations, recommending a degree of caution, stating "the critique leaves the majority of Gould's work unscathed," and noted that "because they couldn't measure all the skulls, they do not know whether the average cranial capacities that Morton reported represent his sample accurately.[116] The journal stated that Gould's opposition to racism may have biased his interpretation of Morton's data, but also noted that "Lewis and his colleagues have their own motivations. Several in the group have an association with the University of Pennsylvania, to whom Morton donated his collection of skulls, and have an interest in seeing the valuable but understudied skull collection freed from the stigma of bias and did not accept Gould's theory "that the scientific method is inevitably tainted by bias."[116]

In 2014, the group's paper was critically reviewed in the journal Evolution & Development by University of Pennsylvania philosopher professor Michael Weisberg, who tended to support Gould's original accusations, concluding that "there is prima facie evidence of a racial bias in Morton's measurements". Weisberg concludes that although Gould did make several errors and overstated his case in a number of places, Morton's work "remains a cautionary example of racial bias in the science of human differences".[117] In 2015, biologists and philosophers Jonathan Kaplan, Massimo Pigliucci, and Joshua Banta published an article arguing that no meaningful conclusions could be drawn from Morton's data. They agreed with Gould, and disagreed with the 2011 study, insofar as Morton's study was seriously flawed, but they agreed with the 2011 study insofar as Gould's analysis was in many ways not better than Morton's.[118] University of Pennsylvania anthropology doctoral student Paul Wolff Mitchell published an analysis of Morton's original, unpublished data, which neither Gould nor subsequent commentators had directly addressed. Mitchell concluded that Gould's specific argument about Morton's unconscious bias in measurement is not supported, but that it was true, as Gould had claimed, that Morton's racial biases influenced how he reported and interpreted his measurements, arguing that Morton's interpretation of his data was arbitrary and tendentious: Morton investigated averages and ignored variations in skull size so large that there was significant overlap.[119] A contemporary of Morton, Friedrich Tiedemann, had collected almost identical skull data and drawn conclusions opposite to Morton's on the basis of this overlap, arguing strongly against any conception of a racial hierarchy.[120][121]

Non-overlapping magisteria

In his book Rocks of Ages (1999), Gould put forward what he described as "a blessedly simple and entirely conventional resolution to ... the supposed conflict between science and religion."[122] He defines the term magisterium as "a domain where one form of teaching holds the appropriate tools for meaningful discourse and resolution."[122] The non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA) principle therefore divides the magisterium of science to cover "the empirical realm: what the Universe is made of (fact) and why does it work in this way (theory). The magisterium of religion extends over questions of ultimate meaning and moral value. These two magisteria do not overlap, nor do they encompass all inquiry."[122] He suggests that "NOMA enjoys strong and fully explicit support, even from the primary cultural stereotypes of hard-line traditionalism" and that NOMA is "a sound position of general consensus, established by long struggle among people of goodwill in both magisteria."[122]

This view has not been without criticism, however. In his book The God Delusion, Richard Dawkins argues that the division between religion and science is not so simple as Gould claims, as few religions exist without claiming the existence of miracles, which "by definition violate the principles of science."[123] Dawkins also opposes the idea that religion has anything meaningful to say about ethics and values, and therefore has no authority to claim a magisterium of its own.[123] He goes on to say that he believes Gould is "bending over backwards to be nice to an unworthy but powerful opponent".[124] Similarly, humanist philosopher Paul Kurtz argues that Gould was wrong to posit that science has nothing to say about questions of ethics. In fact, Kurtz claims that science is a much better method than religion for determining moral principles.[125]

Publications

Articles

Gould's publications were numerous. One review of his publications between 1965 and 2000 noted 479 peer-reviewed papers, 22 books, 300 essays,[10] and 101 "major" book reviews.[1]

Books

The following is a list of books either written or edited by Stephen Jay Gould, including those published posthumously, after his death in 2002. While some books have been republished at later dates, by multiple publishers, the list below comprises the original publisher and publishing date.

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e Shermer, Michael (2002), "This View of Science" (PDF), Social Studies of Science, 32 (4): 489–525, doi:10.1177/0306312702032004001, PMID 12503565, S2CID 220879229.
  2. ^ "Stephen Jay Gould, Ph.D. Biography and Interview". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  3. ^ a b Eldredge, Niles, and S. J. Gould (1972). "Punctuated equilibria: an alternative to phyletic gradualism." In T.J.M. Schopf, ed., Models in Paleobiology. San Francisco: Freeman, Cooper and Company, pp. 82–115.
  4. ^ Sepkoski, David (2012). Rereading the Fossil Record: The Growth of Paleobiology as an Evolutionary Discipline. ISBN 978-0226748580.
  5. ^ Müller, Gerd B. (2013). "Beyond Spandrels: Stephen J. Gould, EvoDevo, and the Extended Synthesis". In Danieli, G.; Minelli, A.; Pievani, T. (eds.). Stephen J. Gould: The Scientific Legacy. pp. 85–99. doi:10.1007/978-88-470-5424-0_6. ISBN 978-88-470-5423-3.
  6. ^ Gould, S. J. (1997). "Nonoverlapping magisteria." June 15, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Natural History 106 (March): 16–22.
  7. ^ a b Tattersall I. "Remembering Stephen Jay Gould". Retrieved June 7, 2013.
  8. ^ Library of Congress. "Living Legend: Stephen Jay Gould". Library of Congress. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
  9. ^ Fahy, Declan (2015). The New Celebrity Scientists: Out of the Lab and into the Limelight. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  10. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (2001). "I have landed". Natural History. 109 (10): 46–59. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  11. ^ "Peter D. Gould, 50, Broadway Designer". The New York Times. October 18, 1994.
  12. ^ a b c Yoon, Carol Kaesuk (May 21, 2002). "Stephen Jay Gould, 60, Is Dead; Enlivened Evolutionary Theory". The New York Times.
  13. ^ a b Green, Michelle (1986). "Stephen Jay Gould: driven by a hunger to learn and to write". People 25 (June 2): 109–114.
  14. ^ Milner, Richard (1990). The Encyclopedia of Evolution. NY: Facts on File, p. 198.
  15. ^ In a January 25, 2001 interview for BBC Radio 4 Gould stated, "Atheists can be highly moral people, I trust. I am myself." (27m:37s); Biologist Jerry Coyne—who had Gould on his thesis committee—described him as a "diehard atheist if there ever was one." (Sam Harris 2015. "Faith vs. Fact: An Interview with Jerry Coyne." October 6, 2015, at the Wayback Machine May 19. [12m:22s] www.samharris.org.) Gould's close friend Oliver Sacks labeled Gould a "Jewish atheist". (Oliver Sacks 2006. "Introduction." The Richness of Life. W. W. Norton, p. 8.)
  16. ^ Gould, S. J. (1995). "The Pattern of Life's History." April 30, 2019, at the Wayback Machine In John Brockman (ed.) The Third Culture April 30, 2019, at the Wayback Machine. New York: Simon & Schuster, p. 60.
  17. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (2002). The Structure of Evolutionary Theory. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, p. 1018. ISBN 0-674-00613-5
  18. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (1981). "Official Transcript for Gould’s deposition in McLean v. Arkansas." (Nov. 27). Under oath Gould stated: "My political views tend to the left of center. Q. Could you be more specific about your political views? A. I don't know how to be. I am not a joiner, so I am not a member of any organization. So I have always resisted labeling. But if you read my other book, The Mismeasure of Man, which is not included because it is not about evolution, you will get a sense of my political views." p. 153.
  19. ^ Perez, Myrna (2013). "Evolutionary Activism: Stephen Jay Gould, the New Left and Sociobiology" (PDF). Endeavour. 37 (2): 104–11. doi:10.1016/j.endeavour.2012.10.002. PMID 23643447.
  20. ^ Gasper, Phil (2002). "Stephen Jay Gould: November 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Dialectical Biologist". International Socialist Review 24 (July–August).
  21. ^ Lewontin, Richard and Richard Levins (2002). "Stephen Jay Gould—what does it mean to be a radical?" March 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Monthly Review 54 (Nov. 1).
  22. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (2003). Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. See his essays: "The Streak of Streaks."
  23. ^ Gould, S. J. (1993). "Dinomania". New York Review of Books 40 (August 12): 51–56.
  24. ^ Gould, S. J. (2000). . The American Scholar. 69 (20): 35–49. Archived from the original on April 30, 2019. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  25. ^ Gould, S. J. (1983). Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-31103-1.
  26. ^ Golden, Frederic (1996) "A Kinder, Gentler Stephen Jay Gould" Los Angeles Times Oct 8.
  27. ^ Rose, Steve (2002). Obituary: Stephen Jay Gould. The Guardian May 22.
  28. ^ Titus, Janet (1983). "Safety Precautions for Asbestos Taken at MCZ." The Harvard Crimson January 24.
  29. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (1985). "The Median Isn't the Message". Discover 6 (June): 40–42.
  30. ^ Bakalar, James and Lester Grinspoon (1997). Marihuana, the Forbidden Medicine. New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 39–41. November 26, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Chwialkowska, Luiza (1995). "Marijuana Helped to Save My Life, Prominent Harvard Scholar Says" Ottawa Citizen.
  32. ^ Harvard News Office (2002). The Harvard Gazette. (May 20). Retrieved on June 4, 2009.
  33. ^ Associated Press (2005). "Family of Stephen Jay Gould sues doctors, hospital."
  34. ^ Krementz, Jill (2002). New York Social Diary. Retrieved on June 4, 2009.
  35. ^ a b Allen, Warren (2008). "The Structure of Gould". March 28, 2016, at the Wayback Machine In Warren Allen et al. Stephen Jay Gould: Reflections on His View of Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 24, 59.
  36. ^ Jones, Steve (2002). "Stephen Jay Gould." The Guardian (May 22).
  37. ^ International Palaeontological Union (I.P.U.) (1968). Westermann, G.E.G. (ed.). Directory of Palaeontologists of the World (excl. Soviet Union & continental China) (2 ed.). Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University. p. 41. Retrieved January 3, 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  38. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  39. ^ Cooper, E. and D. Amber (1997). AAAS News.
  40. ^ Linnean Society of London (2008). "The Darwin–Wallace Medal". Retrieved on June 4, 2009.
  41. ^ Eldredge, Niles (1971). "The Allopatric Model and Phylogeny in Paleozoic Invertebrates." June 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Evolution Vol. 25, No. 1 (Mar. 1971), pp. 156–167.
  42. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1999). The Extended Phenotype, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, p. 101. August 8, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, ISBN 0-19-288051-9.
  43. ^ a b Maynard Smith, John (1984), "Paleontology at the high table", Nature, 309 (5967): 401–402, Bibcode:1984Natur.309..401S, doi:10.1038/309401a0, S2CID 31031206.
  44. ^ Mayr, Ernst (1992). "Speciational Evolution or Punctuated Equilibria". In Steven Peterson and Albert Somit. The Dynamics of Evolution. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, pp. 21–48. ISBN 0-8014-9763-9.
  45. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1986) The Blind Watchmaker. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, p. 225.
  46. ^ Turner, John (1984). "Why we need evolution by jerks." New Scientist 101 (Feb. 9): 34–35.
  47. ^ Gould, S. J. and Steven Rose, ed. (2007). The Richness of Life: The Essential Stephen Jay Gould. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., p. 6.
  48. ^ Thomas, R.D.K. (2009). "Gould, Stephen Jay (1941–2002)". in M. Ruse and J. Travis (eds). Evolution: The First Four Billion Years. Cambridge MA: Belknap Press. pp. 611–615.
  49. ^ Prum, R.O.; Brush, A.H. (2003). "Which Came First, the Feather or the Bird?". Scientific American. 288 (3): 84–93. Bibcode:2003SciAm.288c..84P. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0303-84. PMID 12616863.
  50. ^ a b Gould, S. J.; Lewontin, Richard (1979). "The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme". Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 205 (1161): 581–98. Bibcode:1979RSPSB.205..581G. doi:10.1098/rspb.1979.0086. PMID 42062. S2CID 2129408. for background see Gould's "The Pattern of Life's History" April 14, 2015, at the Wayback Machine in John Brockman The Third Culture January 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. New York: Simon & Schuster. 1996, pp. 52–64. ISBN 0-684-82344-6.
  51. ^ Gould, S. J.; Vrba, E. (1982), "Exaptation—a missing term in the science of form" (PDF), Paleobiology, 8 (1): 4–15, doi:10.1017/S0094837300004310, S2CID 86436132.
  52. ^ Wilson, E. O. (1975). Sociobiology: The New Synthesis. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.
  53. ^ Allen, Elizabeth, et al. (1975). "Against 'Sociobiology'". [letter] New York Review of Books 22 (Nov. 13): 182, 184–186.
  54. ^ Gould, S. J. (1980). "Sociobiology and the Theory of Natural Selection". In G. W. Barlow and J. Silverberg, eds., Sociobiology: Beyond Nature/Nurture? Boulder CO: Westview Press, pp. 257–269.
  55. ^ ITC (1908) International Library of Technology 38 (3): 22.
  56. ^ a b Mark, Robert (1996). "Architecture and Evolution" American Scientist (July–August): 383-389.
  57. ^ Gould, S. J. (1997). "The exaptive excellence of spandrels as a term and prototype". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 94 (20): 10750–10755. Bibcode:1997PNAS...9410750G. doi:10.1073/pnas.94.20.10750. PMC 23474. PMID 11038582.
  58. ^ Maynard Smith, John (November 30, 1995). "Genes, Memes, & Minds". The New York Review of Books. pp. 46–48. By and large, I think their [Spandrels] paper had a healthy effect. . . . Their critique forced us to clean up our act and to provide evidence for our stories. But adaptationism remains the core of biological thinking.
  59. ^ Mayr, Ernst (March 1983). "How to Carry Out the Adaptationist Program?" (PDF). The American Naturalist. 121 (3): 324–334. doi:10.1086/284064. S2CID 3937726.
  60. ^ Williams, George C. (1992). Natural Selection: Domains, Levels, and Challenges. New York City: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195069334.
  61. ^ Lloyd, Elisabeth Anne (2005). The Case of The Female Orgasm: Bias in the science of evolution. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-674-04030-4. OCLC 432675780 – via Internet Archive.
  62. ^ Gould, S.J. (1992). "Male Nipples and Clitoral Ripples". September 22, 2019, at the Wayback Machine In Bully for Brontosaurus: Further Reflections in Natural History. New York: W. W. Norton. pp. 124–138.
  63. ^ Dennett, Daniel (1995) Darwin's Dangerous Idea. New York: Penguin Books, p. 272.
  64. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (1996). Full House: The Spread of Excellence From Plato to Darwin. New York: Harmony Books.
  65. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1997), , Evolution, 51 (3): 1015–1020, doi:10.2307/2411179, JSTOR 2411179, S2CID 87940833, archived from the original on June 1, 2008.
  66. ^ Gould, Jay (January 1997). "Stephen Jay Gould". Mother Jones (Interview). Interviewed by Michael Krasny (talk show host). San Francisco: Mother Jones Magazine.
  67. ^ Gould, S. J. (1991). "The disparity of the Burgess Shale arthropod fauna and the limits of cladistic analysis". January 27, 2018, at the Wayback Machine Paleobiology 17 (October): 411–423.
  68. ^ Baron, Christian and J. T. Høeg (2005). "Gould, Scharm and the Paleontologocal Perspective in Evolutionary Biology". In S. Koenemann and R.A. Jenner, Crustacea and Arthropod Relationships. CRC Press. pp. 3–14. ISBN 0-8493-3498-5.
  69. ^ Wolpert, Lewis and Alison Richards (1998). A Passion For Science. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 139–152. September 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0-19-854212-7.
  70. ^ Gould, S. J. (1996). "A Cerion for Christopher". Natural History 105 (Oct.): 22–29, 78—79.
  71. ^ Google Scholar. https://scholar.google.com. Retrieved on June 12, 2011.
  72. ^ Prothero, Donald. . Skeptic.com. Skeptic Society. Archived from the original on July 7, 2015. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
  73. ^ Shermer, Michael (2002), "This View of Science" (PDF), Social Studies of Science, 32 (4): 518, doi:10.1177/0306312702032004001, PMID 12503565, S2CID 220879229.
  74. ^ de Mythe, Johannes (2000). Van de Schoonheid en de Troost. Episode 13. Hilversum, Netherlands.
  75. ^ Gould, S. J. (1982). "Nonmoral Nature". November 17, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Natural History 91 (Feb.): 19–26.
  76. ^ National Center for Science Education (2003). "Project Steve." www.ncse.com. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  77. ^ "The Pantheon of Skeptics". CSI. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. from the original on January 31, 2017. Retrieved April 30, 2017.
  78. ^ PBS (1984). "Stephen Jay Gould: This View of Life". NOVA. December 18.
  79. ^ CNN. Talkback Live August 9, 1996; Crossfire August 17, 1999.
  80. ^ Kayzer, Wim (1993) Een schitterend ongeluk.. Netherlands: VPRO. See also Oliver Sacks (2007). Forward. In Steven Rose, ed. The Richness of Life. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, p. xi.
  81. ^ PBS (1987). 3-2-1 Contact. "Dinosaur Detectives" October 27. "Mammals: Rats and Bats" November 2.
  82. ^ . ncse.com. National Center for Science Education. Archived from the original on August 10, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  83. ^ Fox. The Simpsons. "Lisa the Skeptic", November 23, 1997. Audio clip.
  84. ^ Scully, Mike (2006). The Simpsons. Season 9 DVD Commentary for "Lisa the Skeptic". DVD. 20th Century Fox.
  85. ^ Shermer, Michael (2002). "This View of Science". Social Studies of Science 32 (4): 518.
    "Awards include a National Book Award for The Panda's Thumb, a National Book Critics Circle Award for The Mismeasure of Man, the Phi Beta Kappa Book Award for Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes, and a Pulitzer Prize Finalist for Wonderful Life, on which Gould commented "close but, as they say, no cigar." Forty-four honorary degrees and 66 major fellowships, medals, and awards bear witness to the depth and scope of his accomplishments in both the sciences and humanities: Member of the National Academy of Sciences, President and Fellow of AAAS, MacArthur Foundation 'genius' Fellowship (in the first group of awardees), Humanist Laureate from the Academy of Humanism, Fellow of the Linnean Society of London, Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fellow of the European Union of Geosciences, Associate of the Muséum National D'Histoire Naturelle Paris, the Schuchert Award for excellence in paleontological research, Scientist of the Year from Discover magazine, the Silver Medal from the Zoological Society of London, the Gold Medal for Service to Zoology from the Linnean Society of London, the Edinburgh Medal from the City of Edinburgh, the Britannica Award and Gold Medal for dissemination of public knowledge, Public Service Award from the Geological Society of America, Anthropology in Media Award from the American Anthropological Association, Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of Biology Teachers, Distinguished Scientist Award from UCLA, the Randi Award for Skeptic of the Year from the Skeptics Society, and a Festschrift in his honour at Caltech."
  86. ^ These are the first two paragraphs, with notes, from an unpublished "Letter to the Editor of The New York Review of Books" by Leda Cosmides and John Tooby (July 7, 1997). They wrote in comment on two NYRB articles by Gould (June 12 and 26).
    John Maynard Smith, one of the world's leading evolutionary biologists, recently summarized in the NYRB the sharply conflicting assessments of Stephen Jay Gould: "Because of the excellence of his essays, he has come to be seen by non-biologists as the pre-eminent evolutionary theorist. In contrast, the evolutionary biologists with whom I have discussed his work tend to see him as a man whose ideas are so confused as to be hardly worth bothering with, but as one who should not be publicly criticized because he is at least on our side against the creationists." (NYRB, November 30, 1995, p. 46). No one can take any pleasure in the evident pain Gould is experiencing now that his actual standing within the community of professional evolutionary biologists is finally becoming more widely known. If what was a stake was solely one man's self-regard, common decency would preclude comment.
    But as Maynard Smith points out, more is at stake. Gould "is giving non-biologists a largely false picture of the state of evolutionary theory"—or as Ernst Mayr says of Gould and his small group of allies—they "quite conspicuously misrepresent the views of [biology's] leading spokesmen."[1] Indeed, although Gould characterizes his critics as "anonymous" and "a tiny coterie," nearly every major evolutionary biologist of our era has weighed in a vain attempt to correct the tangle of confusions that the higher profile Gould has inundated the intellectual world with.[2] The point is not that Gould is the object of some criticism—so properly are we all—it is that his reputation as a credible and balanced authority about evolutionary biology is non-existent among those who are in a professional position to know.
    1.^ Mayr, Ernst (1988) Toward a new philosophy of biology. Harvard University Press, pp. 534-535.
    2.^ These include Ernst Mayr, John Maynard Smith, George Williams, Bill Hamilton, Richard Dawkins, E.O. Wilson, Tim Clutton-Brock, Paul Harvey, Brian Charlesworth, Jerry Coyne, Robert Trivers, John Alcock, Randy Thornhill, and many others.
    Note: Where Tooby and Cosmides quote Ernst Mayr, Mayr does not mention Gould by name, but is speaking generally of the critics of the Neo-Darwinian Synthesis. Also, the list of major biologists provided by Tooby and Cosmides may not be fairly represented. E.g., Mayr, Williams, Dawkins, and Coyne have expressed public admiration for Gould as a scientist.
    In the first of his two articles that provoked Tooby and Cosmides, Gould had commented on the November 1995 review of his work by Maynard Smith: Gould, "Darwinian Fundamentalism", New York Review of Books 44 (June 12, 1997): 34–37.
    A false fact can be refuted, a false argument exposed; but how can one respond to a purely ad hominem attack? This harder, and altogether more discouraging, task may best be achieved by exposing internal inconsistency and unfairness of rhetoric.
    [quotation of Smith's criticism of Gould, November 1995 NYRB]
    It seems futile to reply to an attack so empty of content, and based only on comments by anonymous critics; [...] Instead of responding to Maynard Smith's attack against my integrity and scholarship, citing people unknown and with arguments unmentioned, let me, instead, merely remind him of the blatant inconsistency between his admirable past and lamentable present. Some sixteen years ago he wrote a highly critical but wonderfully supportive review of my early book of essays, The Panda's Thumb, stating: "I hope it will be obvious that my wish to argue with Gould is a compliment, not a criticism." He then attended my series of Tanner Lectures at Cambridge in 1984 and wrote in a report for Nature, and under the remarkable title "Paleontology at the High Table," the kindest and most supportive critical commentary I have ever received. He argued that the work of a small group of American paleobiologists had brought the entire subject back to theoretical centrality within the evolutionary sciences. [...]
    So we face the enigma of a man who has written numerous articles, amounting to tens of thousands of words, about my work—always strongly and incisively critical, always richly informed (and always, I might add, enormously appreciated by me). But now Maynard Smith needs to canvass unnamed colleagues to find out that my ideas are "hardly worth bothering with". He really ought to be asking himself why he has been bothering about my work so intensely, and for so many years.
  87. ^ Brown, Andrew (1999). The Darwin Wars: The Scientific Battle for the Soul of Man. London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-8050-7137-7
  88. ^ a b Sterelny, Kim (2007), Dawkins vs. Gould: Survival of the Fittest, Cambridge, UK: Icon Books, ISBN 978-1-84046-780-2 Also ISBN 978-1-84046-780-2
  89. ^ Maynard Smith, John (1981). "Did Darwin get it right?" The London Review of Books 3 (11): 10–11; Also reprinted in Did Darwin Get it Right? New York: Chapman and Hall, 1989, pp. 148–156.
  90. ^ Maynard Smith, John (1995). "Genes, Memes, & Minds". The New York Review of Books 42 (Nov. 30): 46–48.
  91. ^ Maynard Smith, John (1981). "Review of The Panda's Thumb" The London Review of Books pp. 17–30; Reprinted as "Tinkering" in his Did Darwin Get It Right? New York: Chapman and Hall. 1989, pp. 94, 97.
  92. ^ Wright, Robert (1999). "The Accidental Creationist: Why Stephen J. Gould is bad for evolution". November 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine The New Yorker 75 (Dec. 13): 56–65.
  93. ^ Gould, S. J. (1981). "Evolution as fact and theory". Discover 2 (May): 34–37.
  94. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1998). Unweaving the Rainbow. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, pp. 196–197. "It is when we ask what happens during the sudden bursts of species formation that the confusion... arises... Gould is aware of the difference between rapid gradualism and macromutation, but he treats the matter as though it were a minor detail, to be cleared up after we have taken on board the overarching question of whether evolution is episodic rather than gradual."
  95. ^ "Fraud in the Imputation of Fraud | Psychology Today". www.psychologytoday.com. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  96. ^ Conway Morris, S.; Gould, S. J. (1998). . Natural History. 107: 48–55. Archived from the original on December 10, 2010. Retrieved January 4, 2006.
  97. ^ Conway Morris, Simon (2003). Life's Solution: Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  98. ^ Fortey, Richard (1998). "Shock Lobsters". August 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine London Review of Books 20 (Oct. 1).
  99. ^ Briggs, Derek; Fortey, Richard (2005). (PDF). Paleobiology. 31 (2): 94–112. doi:10.1666/0094-8373(2005)031[0094:WSSSGA]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 44066226. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 12, 2016. Retrieved June 17, 2016. Abstract
  100. ^ Kemp, Thomas (2016). Origin of Higher Taxa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 88.
  101. ^ Dawkins, Richard (1998). Unweaving the Rainbow, p. 202.
  102. ^ Gould, S. J. (2002). The Structure of Evolutionary Theory. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, p. 1156. ISBN 0-674-00613-5
  103. ^ Gould, S. J. (1997). "Evolution: The pleasures of pluralism". November 10, 2016, at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 44 (June 26): 47–52.
  104. ^ Wilson, E. O. (2006). Naturalist New York: Island Press, p. 337 ISBN 1-59726-088-6.
  105. ^ Pinker, Steven (2002), The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature, New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-200334-3
  106. ^ Gould S. J. (1996). The Mismeasure of Man: Revised and Expanded Edition. November 29, 2015, at the Wayback Machine New York: W. W. Norton & Co., p. 36. ISBN 0-14-025824-8
  107. ^ a b Gould, S. J. (1992). "Biological potentiality vs. biological determinism". In Ever Since Darwin. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., pp. 251–259.
  108. ^ In 1981 The Mismeasure of Man won the National Book Critics Circle Award for non-fiction. It was voted as the 17th greatest science book of all time by Discover magazine vol. 27 (December 8, 2006); 9th best skeptic book by The Skeptics Society (Frank Diller, "Scientists' Nightstand" American Scientist); and ranked 24th place for the best non-fiction book by the Modern Library.
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External links

stephen, gould, september, 1941, 2002, american, paleontologist, evolutionary, biologist, historian, science, most, influential, widely, read, authors, popular, science, generation, gould, spent, most, career, teaching, harvard, university, working, american, . Stephen Jay Gould ɡ uː l d September 10 1941 May 20 2002 was an American paleontologist evolutionary biologist and historian of science He was one of the most influential and widely read authors of popular science of his generation 1 Gould spent most of his career teaching at Harvard University and working at the American Museum of Natural History in New York In 1996 Gould was hired as the Vincent Astor Visiting Research Professor of Biology at New York University after which he divided his time teaching between there and Harvard Stephen Jay GouldBorn 1941 09 10 September 10 1941Queens New York U S DiedMay 20 2002 2002 05 20 aged 60 Manhattan New York U S EducationAntioch College BA University of Leeds Columbia University PhD Known forPunctuated equilibrium Non overlapping magisteria Spandrel ExaptationSpousesDeborah Lee m 1965 div 1995 2 children Rhonda Roland Shearer m 1995 2 stepchildren AwardsLinnean Society of London s Darwin Wallace Medal 2008 Paleontological Society Medal 2002 St Louis Literary Award 1994 Sue Tyler Friedman Medal 1989 American Academy of Achievement s Golden Plate Award 1982 Charles Schuchert Award 1975 Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science 1983 1990 MacArthur Fellowship National Book Award National Book Critics Circle AwardScientific careerFieldsPaleontology evolutionary biology history of scienceInstitutionsHarvard University American Museum of Natural History New York UniversityThesisPleistocene and Recent History of the SubgenusPoecilozonites Poecilozonites Gastropoda Pulmonata in Bermuda An Evolutionary Microcosm 1967 Doctoral advisorsR L Batten J Imbrie Norman D NewellDoctoral studentsDaniel FisherLinda IvanyJack SepkoskiKurt WiseSignatureGould s most significant contribution to evolutionary biology was the theory of punctuated equilibrium 2 developed with Niles Eldredge in 1972 3 The theory proposes that most evolution is characterized by long periods of evolutionary stability infrequently punctuated by swift periods of branching speciation The theory was contrasted against phyletic gradualism the popular idea that evolutionary change is marked by a pattern of smooth and continuous change in the fossil record 4 Most of Gould s empirical research was based on the land snail genera Poecilozonites and Cerion He also made important contributions to evolutionary developmental biology receiving broad professional recognition for his book Ontogeny and Phylogeny 5 In evolutionary theory he opposed strict selectionism sociobiology as applied to humans and evolutionary psychology He campaigned against creationism and proposed that science and religion should be considered two distinct fields or non overlapping magisteria whose authorities do not overlap 6 Gould was known by the general public mainly for his 300 popular essays in Natural History magazine 7 and his numerous books written for both the specialist and non specialist In April 2000 the US Library of Congress named him a Living Legend 8 9 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Marriage and family 1 2 First bout of cancer 1 3 Final illness and death 2 Scientific career 2 1 Punctuated equilibrium 2 2 Evolutionary developmental biology 2 3 Selectionism and sociobiology 2 3 1 Against Sociobiology 2 3 2 Spandrels and the Panglossian paradigm 2 4 Evolutionary progress 2 5 Cultural evolution 2 6 Cladistics 2 7 Technical work on land snails 2 8 Influence 2 9 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory 2 10 As a public figure 3 The Darwin Wars 3 1 Cambrian fauna 3 2 Opposition to sociobiology and evolutionary psychology 3 3 The Mismeasure of Man 4 Non overlapping magisteria 5 Publications 5 1 Articles 5 2 Books 6 Notes and references 7 External linksBiography Edit Gould s inspiration to become a paleontologist T rex specimen AMNH 5027 American Museum of Natural History New York City Stephen Jay Gould was born in Queens New York on September 10 1941 His father Leonard was a court stenographer and a World War II veteran in the United States Navy His mother Eleanor was an artist whose parents were Jewish immigrants living and working in the city s Garment District 10 Gould and his younger brother Peter were raised in Bayside a middle class neighborhood in the northeastern section of Queens 11 He attended P S 26 elementary school and graduated from Jamaica High School 12 When Gould was five years old his father took him to the Hall of Dinosaurs in the American Museum of Natural History where he first encountered Tyrannosaurus rex I had no idea there were such things I was awestruck Gould once recalled 13 It was in that moment that he decided to become a paleontologist 14 Raised in a secular Jewish home Gould did not formally practice religion and preferred to be called an agnostic 15 When asked directly if he was an agnostic in Skeptic magazine he responded If you absolutely forced me to bet on the existence of a conventional anthropomorphic deity of course I d bet no But basically Huxley was right when he said that agnosticism is the only honorable position because we really cannot know And that s right I d be real surprised if there turned out to be a conventional God Though he had been brought up by a Marxist father 16 he stated that his father s politics were very different from his own 17 In describing his own political views he has said they tend to the left of center 18 According to Gould the most influential political books he read were C Wright Mills The Power Elite and the political writings of Noam Chomsky 18 While attending Antioch College in Yellow Springs Ohio in the early 1960s Gould was active in the civil rights movement and often campaigned for social justice 19 When he attended the University of Leeds as a visiting undergraduate he organized weekly demonstrations outside a Bradford dance hall which refused to admit black people Gould continued these demonstrations until the policy was revoked 20 Throughout his career and writings he spoke out against cultural oppression in all its forms especially what he saw as the pseudoscience used in the service of racism and sexism 21 Interspersed throughout his scientific essays for Natural History magazine Gould frequently referred to his non scientific interests and pastimes As a boy he collected baseball cards and remained an avid New York Yankees fan throughout his life 22 As an adult he was fond of science fiction movies but often lamented their poor storytelling and presentation of science 23 His other interests included singing baritone in the Boston Cecilia and he was a great aficionado of Gilbert and Sullivan operas 24 He collected rare antiquarian books possessed an enthusiasm for architecture and delighted in city walks He often traveled to Europe and spoke French German Russian and Italian He sometimes alluded ruefully to his tendency to put on weight 25 Marriage and family Edit Gould married artist Deborah Lee on October 3 1965 12 Gould met Lee while they were students together at Antioch College 13 They had two sons Jesse and Ethan and were married for 30 years 26 His second marriage in 1995 was to artist and sculptor Rhonda Roland Shearer 12 First bout of cancer Edit In July 1982 Gould was diagnosed with peritoneal mesothelioma a deadly form of cancer affecting the abdominal lining the peritoneum This cancer is frequently found in people who have ingested or inhaled asbestos fibers a mineral which was used in the construction of Harvard s Museum of Comparative Zoology 27 28 After a difficult two year recovery Gould published a column for Discover magazine in 1985 titled The Median Isn t the Message which discusses his reaction to reading that mesothelioma is incurable with a median mortality of only eight months after discovery 29 In his essay he describes the actual significance behind this fact and his relief upon recognizing that statistical averages are useful abstractions and by themselves do not encompass our actual world of variation shadings and continua 29 Gould was also an advocate of medical cannabis When undergoing his cancer treatments he smoked marijuana to help alleviate the long periods of intense and uncontrollable nausea According to Gould the drug had a most important effect on his eventual recovery He later complained that he could not understand how any humane person would withhold such a beneficial substance from people in such great need simply because others use it for different purposes 30 On August 5 1998 Gould s testimony assisted in the successful lawsuit of HIV activist Jim Wakeford who sued the Government of Canada for the right to cultivate possess and use marijuana for medical purposes 31 Final illness and death Edit In February 2002 a 3 centimetre 1 2 in lesion was found on Gould s chest radiograph and oncologists diagnosed him with stage IV cancer Gould died 10 weeks later on May 20 2002 from a metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung an aggressive form of cancer which had already spread to his brain liver and spleen 32 This cancer was unrelated to his previous bout of abdominal cancer in 1982 33 He died in his home in a bed set up in the library of his SoHo loft surrounded by his wife Rhonda his mother Eleanor and the many books he loved 34 Scientific career EditGould began his higher education at Antioch College graduating with a double major in geology and philosophy in 1963 35 During this time he also studied at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom 36 After completing graduate work at Columbia University in 1967 under the guidance of Norman Newell 37 he was immediately hired by Harvard University where he worked until the end of his life 1967 2002 In 1973 Harvard promoted him to professor of geology and curator of invertebrate paleontology at the institution s Museum of Comparative Zoology 1 In 1982 Harvard awarded him the title of Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology That same year he received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement 38 In 1983 he was awarded a fellowship at the American Association for the Advancement of Science where he later served as president 1999 2001 The AAAS news release cited his numerous contributions to both scientific progress and the public understanding of science 39 He also served as president of the Paleontological Society 1985 1986 and of the Society for the Study of Evolution 1990 1991 1 In 1989 Gould was elected into the body of the National Academy of Sciences Through 1996 2002 Gould was Vincent Astor Visiting Research Professor of Biology at New York University In 2001 the American Humanist Association named him the Humanist of the Year for his lifetime of work 1 In 2008 he was posthumously awarded the Darwin Wallace Medal along with 12 other recipients Until 2008 this medal had been awarded every 50 years by the Linnean Society of London 40 Punctuated equilibrium Edit The punctuated equilibrium model above consists of morphological stability followed by episodic bursts of evolutionary change via rapid cladogenesis It is contrasted below to phyletic gradualism a more gradual continuous model of evolution Main article Punctuated equilibriumSee also Unit of selection Early in his career Gould and his colleague Niles Eldredge developed the theory of punctuated equilibrium which describes the rate of speciation in the fossil record as occurring relatively rapidly which then alternates to a longer period of evolutionary stability 3 It was Gould who coined the term punctuated equilibria though the theory was originally presented by Eldredge in his doctoral dissertation on Devonian trilobites and his article published the previous year on allopatric speciation 41 According to Gould punctuated equilibrium revised a key pillar in the central logic of Darwinian theory 17 Some evolutionary biologists have argued that while punctuated equilibrium was of great interest to biology generally 42 it merely modified neo Darwinism in a manner that was fully compatible with what had been known before 43 Other biologists emphasize the theoretical novelty of punctuated equilibrium and argued that evolutionary stasis had been unexpected by most evolutionary biologists and had a major impact on paleontology and evolutionary biology 44 Comparisons were made to George Gaylord Simpson s work in Tempo and Mode in Evolution 1941 in which he also illustrated relatively sudden changes along evolutionary lines Simpson describes the paleontological record as being characterized by predominantly gradual change which he termed horotely although he also documented examples of slow bradytely and rapid tachytely rates of evolution Punctuated equilibrium and phyletic gradualism are not mutually exclusive as Simpson s work demonstrates and examples of each have been documented in different lineages The debate between these two models is often misunderstood by non scientists and according to Richard Dawkins has been oversold by the media 45 Some critics jokingly referred to the theory of punctuated equilibrium as evolution by jerks 46 which prompted Gould to describe phyletic gradualism as evolution by creeps 47 Evolutionary developmental biology Edit Gould made significant contributions to evolutionary developmental biology 48 especially in his work Ontogeny and Phylogeny 35 In this book he emphasized the process of heterochrony which encompasses two distinct processes neoteny and terminal additions Neoteny is the process where ontogeny is slowed down and the organism does not reach the end of its development Terminal addition is the process by which an organism adds to its development by speeding and shortening earlier stages in the developmental process Gould s influence in the field of evolutionary developmental biology continues to be seen today in areas such as the evolution of feathers 49 Selectionism and sociobiology Edit Gould was a champion of biological constraints internal limitations upon developmental pathways as well as other non selectionist forces in evolution Rather than direct adaptations he considered many higher functions of the human brain to be the unintended side consequence of natural selection 50 To describe such co opted features he coined the term exaptation with paleontologist Elisabeth Vrba 51 Gould believed this feature of human mentality undermines an essential premise of human sociobiology and evolutionary psychology citation needed Against Sociobiology Edit In 1975 Gould s Harvard colleague E O Wilson introduced his analysis of animal behavior including human behavior based on a sociobiological framework that suggested that many social behaviors have a strong evolutionary basis 52 In response Gould Richard Lewontin and others from the Boston area wrote the subsequently well referenced letter to The New York Review of Books entitled Against Sociobiology This open letter criticized Wilson s notion of a deterministic view of human society and human action 53 But Gould did not rule out sociobiological explanations for many aspects of animal behavior and later wrote Sociobiologists have broadened their range of selective stories by invoking concepts of inclusive fitness and kin selection to solve successfully I think the vexatious problem of altruism previously the greatest stumbling block to a Darwinian theory of social behavior Here sociobiology has had and will continue to have success And here I wish it well For it represents an extension of basic Darwinism to a realm where it should apply 54 Spandrels and the Panglossian paradigm Edit Further information Spandrel biology A spandrel from the Holy Trinity Church in Fulnek Czech Republic With Richard Lewontin Gould wrote an influential 1979 paper entitled The Spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian Paradigm 50 which introduced the architectural term spandrel into evolutionary biology In architecture a spandrel is a triangular space which exists over the haunches of an arch 55 56 Spandrels more often called pendentives in this context are found particularly in classical architecture especially Byzantine and Renaissance churches When visiting Venice in 1978 Gould noted that the spandrels of the San Marco cathedral while quite beautiful were not spaces planned by the architect Rather the spaces arise as necessary architectural byproducts of mounting a dome on rounded arches Gould and Lewontin thus defined spandrels in the evolutionary biology context to mean any biological feature of an organism that arises as a necessary side consequence of other features which is not directly selected for by natural selection Proposed examples include the masculinized genitalia in female hyenas exaptive use of an umbilicus as a brooding chamber by snails the shoulder hump of the giant Irish deer and several key features of human mentality 57 In Voltaire s Candide Dr Pangloss is portrayed as a clueless scholar who despite the evidence insists that all is for the best in this best of all possible worlds Gould and Lewontin asserted that it is Panglossian for evolutionary biologists to view all traits as atomized things that had been naturally selected for and criticised biologists for not granting theoretical space to other causes such as phyletic and developmental constraints The relative frequency of spandrels so defined versus adaptive features in nature remains a controversial topic in evolutionary biology 58 59 60 An illustrative example of Gould s approach can be found in Elisabeth Lloyd s case study suggesting that the female orgasm is a by product of shared developmental pathways 61 Gould also wrote on this topic in his essay Male Nipples and Clitoral Ripples prompted by Lloyd s earlier work 62 Gould was criticized by philosopher Daniel Dennett for using the term spandrel instead of pendentive 63 a spandrel that curves across a right angle to support a dome Robert Mark a professor of civil engineering at Princeton offered his expertise in the pages of American Scientist noting that these definitions are often misunderstood in architectural theory Mark concluded Gould and Lewontin s misapplication of the term spandrel for pendentive perhaps implies a wider latitude of design choice than they intended for their analogy But Dennett s critique of the architectural basis of the analogy goes even further astray because he slights the technical rationale of the architectural elements in question 56 Evolutionary progress Edit See also Abiogenesis Largest scale trends in evolution and Orthogenesis Gould favored the argument that evolution has no inherent drive towards long term progress Uncritical commentaries often portray evolution as a ladder of progress leading towards bigger faster and smarter organisms the assumption being that evolution is somehow driving organisms to get more complex and ultimately more like humankind Gould argued that evolution s drive was not towards complexity but towards diversification Because life is constrained to begin with a simple starting point like bacteria any diversity resulting from this start by random walk will have a skewed distribution and therefore be perceived to move in the direction of higher complexity But life Gould argued can also easily adapt towards simplification as is often the case with parasites 64 In a review of Full House Richard Dawkins approved of Gould s general argument but suggested that he saw evidence of a tendency for lineages to improve cumulatively their adaptive fit to their particular way of life by increasing the numbers of features which combine together in adaptive complexes By this definition adaptive evolution is not just incidentally progressive it is deeply dyed in the wool indispensably progressive 65 Cultural evolution Edit See also Cultural evolution Lamarckism Memetics and Sociocultural evolution Gould s arguments towards progress in evolutionary biology did not extend towards a notion of progress in general or notions of cultural evolution In Full House Gould compares two notions of progress against one another While the first concept of progress evolutionary progress is argued to be invalid for a number of biological considerations Gould permits that evolution may operate in human cultural evolution through a Lamarckian mechanism Gould goes on to argue that the disappearance of the 0 400 batting average in baseball is paradoxically due to the inclusion of better players in the league rather than players becoming worse over time In his view such a process is likely reflective in a number of cultural phenomena including sports the visual arts and music where unlike in biological systems the realm of aesthetic possibilities is constrained by a right wall of human limits and aesthetic preferences 66 Gould later goes on to state that his arguments for biological evolution should not be applied to cultural change lest they be employed by so called political correctness as a doctrine that celebrates all indigenous practice and therefore permits no distinctions judgements or analyses 64 Cladistics Edit Gould never embraced cladistics as a method of investigating evolutionary lineages and process possibly because he was concerned that such investigations would lead to neglect of the details in historical biology which he considered all important In the early 1990s this led him into a debate with Derek Briggs who had begun to apply quantitative cladistic techniques to the Burgess Shale fossils about the methods to be used in interpreting these fossils 67 Around this time cladistics rapidly became the dominant method of classification in evolutionary biology Inexpensive but increasingly powerful personal computers made it possible to process large quantities of data about organisms and their characteristics Around the same time the development of effective polymerase chain reaction techniques made it possible to apply cladistic methods of analysis to biochemical and genetic features as well 68 Technical work on land snails Edit Cerion shells from San Salvador Island Bahamas Most of Gould s empirical research pertained to land snails He focused his early work on the Bermudian genus Poecilozonites while his later work concentrated on the West Indian genus Cerion According to Gould Cerion is the land snail of maximal diversity in form throughout the entire world There are 600 described species of this single genus In fact they re not really species they all interbreed but the names exist to express a real phenomenon which is this incredible morphological diversity Some are shaped like golf balls some are shaped like pencils Now my main subject is the evolution of form and the problem of how it is that you can get this diversity amid so little genetic difference so far as we can tell is a very interesting one And if we could solve this we d learn something general about the evolution of form 69 Given Cerion s extensive geographic diversity Gould later lamented that if Christopher Columbus had only catalogued a single Cerion it would have ended the scholarly debate about which island Columbus had first set foot on in America 70 Influence Edit Gould is one of the most frequently cited scientists in the field of evolutionary theory His 1979 spandrels paper has been cited more than 5 000 times 71 In Paleobiology the flagship journal of his own speciality only Charles Darwin and George Gaylord Simpson have been cited more often 72 Gould was also a considerably respected historian of science Historian Ronald Numbers has been quoted as saying I can t say much about Gould s strengths as a scientist but for a long time I ve regarded him as the second most influential historian of science next to Thomas Kuhn 73 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory Edit Shortly before his death Gould published The Structure of Evolutionary Theory 2002 a long treatise recapitulating his version of modern evolutionary theory In an interview for the Dutch TV series Of Beauty and Consolation Gould remarked In a couple of years I will be able to gather in one volume my view of how evolution works It is to me a great consolation because it represents the putting together of a lifetime of thinking into one source That book will never be particularly widely read It s going to be far too long and it s only for a few thousand professionals very different from my popular science writings but it is of greater consolation to me because it is a chance to put into one place a whole way of thinking about evolution that I ve struggled with all my life 74 As a public figure Edit Gould became widely known through his popular essays on evolution in the Natural History magazine His essays were published in a series entitled This View of Life a phrase from the concluding paragraph of Charles Darwin s Origin of Species from January 1974 to January 2001 amounting to a continuous publication of 300 essays 7 Many of his essays were reprinted in collected volumes that became bestselling books such as Ever Since Darwin and The Panda s Thumb Hen s Teeth and Horse s Toes and The Flamingo s Smile A passionate advocate of evolutionary theory Gould wrote prolifically on the subject trying to communicate his understanding of contemporary evolutionary biology to a wide audience A recurring theme in his writings is the history and development of pre evolutionary and evolutionary thought He was also an enthusiastic baseball fan and sabermetrician analyst of baseball statistics and made frequent reference to the sport in his essays Many of his baseball essays were anthologized in his posthumously published book Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville 2003 22 Although a self described Darwinist Gould s emphasis was less gradualist and reductionist than most neo Darwinists He fiercely opposed many aspects of sociobiology and its intellectual descendant evolutionary psychology He devoted considerable time to fighting against creationism creation science and intelligent design Most notably Gould provided expert testimony against the equal time creationism law in McLean v Arkansas Gould later developed the term non overlapping magisteria NOMA to describe how in his view science and religion should not comment on each other s realm Gould went on to develop this idea in some detail particularly in the books Rocks of Ages 1999 and The Hedgehog the Fox and the Magister s Pox 2003 In a 1982 essay for Natural History Gould wrote Our failure to discern a universal good does not record any lack of insight or ingenuity but merely demonstrates that nature contains no moral messages framed in human terms Morality is a subject for philosophers theologians students of the humanities indeed for all thinking people The answers will not be read passively from nature they do not and cannot arise from the data of science The factual state of the world does not teach us how we with our powers for good and evil should alter or preserve it in the most ethical manner 75 An anti evolution petition drafted by the Discovery Institute inspired the National Center for Science Education to create a pro evolution counterpart called Project Steve which is named in Gould s honor 76 In 2011 the executive council of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry CSI selected Gould for inclusion in CSI s Pantheon of Skeptics created to remember the legacy of deceased CSI fellows and their contributions to the cause of scientific skepticism 77 Gould also became a noted public face of science often appearing on television In 1984 Gould received his own NOVA special on PBS 78 Other appearances included interviews on CNN s Crossfire and Talkback Live 79 NBC s The Today Show and regular appearances on PBS s Charlie Rose show Gould was also a guest in all seven episodes of the Dutch talk series A Glorious Accident in which he appeared with his close friend Oliver Sacks 80 Gould was featured prominently as a guest in Ken Burns s PBS documentary Baseball as well as PBS s Evolution series Gould was also on the Board of Advisers to the influential Children s Television Workshop television show 3 2 1 Contact where he made frequent guest appearances 81 Since 2013 Gould has been listed on the Advisory Council of the National Center for Science Education 82 In 1997 he voiced a cartoon version of himself on the television series The Simpsons In the episode Lisa the Skeptic Lisa finds a skeleton that many people believe is an apocalyptic angel Lisa contacts Gould and asks him to test the skeleton s DNA The fossil is discovered to be a marketing gimmick for a new mall 83 During production the only phrase Gould objected to was a line in the script that introduced him as the world s most brilliant paleontologist 84 In 2002 the show paid tribute to Gould after his death dedicating the season 13 finale to his memory Gould had died two days before the episode aired The Darwin Wars EditGould received many accolades for his scholarly work and popular expositions of natural history 85 but a number of biologists felt his public presentations were out of step with mainstream evolutionary thinking 86 The public debates between Gould s supporters and detractors have been so quarrelsome that they have been dubbed The Darwin Wars by several commentators 87 88 John Maynard Smith the eminent British evolutionary biologist was among Gould s strongest critics Maynard Smith thought that Gould misjudged the vital role of adaptation in biology and was critical of Gould s acceptance of species selection as a major component of biological evolution 89 In a review of Daniel Dennett s book Darwin s Dangerous Idea Maynard Smith wrote that Gould is giving non biologists a largely false picture of the state of evolutionary theory 90 But Maynard Smith was not consistently negative writing in a review of The Panda s Thumb that Stephen Gould is the best writer of popular science now active Often he infuriates me but I hope he will go right on writing essays like these 91 Maynard Smith was also among those who welcomed Gould s reinvigoration of evolutionary paleontology 43 One reason for criticism was that Gould appeared to be presenting his ideas as a revolutionary way of understanding evolution and argued for the importance of mechanisms other than natural selection mechanisms which he believed had been ignored by many professional evolutionists As a result many non specialists sometimes inferred from his early writings that Darwinian explanations had been proven to be unscientific which Gould never tried to imply Along with many other researchers in the field Gould s works were sometimes deliberately taken out of context by creationists as proof that scientists no longer understood how organisms evolved 92 Gould himself corrected some of these misinterpretations and distortions of his writings in later works 93 The conflicts between Richard Dawkins and Gould were popularized by philosopher Kim Sterelny in his 2001 book Dawkins vs Gould Sterelny documents their disagreements over theoretical issues including the prominence of gene selection in evolution Dawkins argues that natural selection is best understood as competition among genes or replicators while Gould advocated multi level selection which includes selection amongst genes nucleic acid sequences cell lineages organisms demes species and clades 88 Dawkins accused Gould of deliberately underplaying the differences between rapid gradualism and macromutation in his published accounts of punctuated equilibrium 94 He also devoted entire chapters to critiquing Gould s account of evolution in his books The Blind Watchmaker and Unweaving the Rainbow as did Daniel Dennett in his 1995 book Darwin s Dangerous Idea Other biologists contemporary to Gould went further as in the case of Robert Trivers who classified it as intellectual fraud 95 Cambrian fauna Edit In his book Wonderful Life 1989 Gould famously described the Cambrian fauna of the Burgess Shale emphasizing their bizarre anatomical designs their sudden appearance and the role chance played in determining which members survived He used the Cambrian fauna as an example of the role contingency has in shaping the broader pattern of evolution His view of contingency was criticized by Simon Conway Morris in his 1998 book The Crucible of Creation 96 Conway Morris stressed members of the Cambrian fauna that resemble modern taxa He also argued that convergent evolution has a tendency to produce similarities of organization and that the forms of life are restricted and channelled In his book Life s Solution 2003 Conway Morris argued that the appearance of human like animals is also likely 97 Paleontologist Richard Fortey noted that prior to the release of Wonderful Life Conway Morris shared a similar thesis to Gould s but after Wonderful Life Conway Morris revised his interpretation and adopted a more deterministic position on the history of life 98 Paleontologists Derek Briggs and Richard Fortey have also argued that much of the Cambrian fauna may be regarded as stem groups of living taxa 99 though this is still a subject of intense research and debate and the relationship of many Cambrian taxa to modern phyla has not been established in the eyes of many palaeontologists 100 Richard Dawkins disagrees with the view that new phyla suddenly appeared in the Cambrian arguing that for a new phylum to spring into existence what actually has to happen on the ground is that a child is born which suddenly out of the blue is as different from its parents as a snail is from an earthworm No zoologist who thinks through the implications not even the most ardent saltationist has ever supported any such notion 101 In the Structure of Evolutionary Theory Gould stresses the difference between phyletic splitting and large anatomical transitions noting that the two events may be separated by millions of years Gould argues that no paleontologist regards the Cambrian explosion as a genealogical event that is as the actual time of initial splitting but rather it marks an anatomical transition in the overt phenotypes of bilaterian organisms 102 Opposition to sociobiology and evolutionary psychology Edit Gould also had a long running public feud with E O Wilson and other evolutionary biologists concerning the disciplines of human sociobiology and evolutionary psychology both of which Gould and Lewontin opposed but which Richard Dawkins Daniel Dennett and Steven Pinker advocated 103 These debates reached their climax in the 1970s and included strong opposition from groups such as the Sociobiology Study Group and Science for the People 104 Pinker accuses Gould Lewontin and other opponents of evolutionary psychology of being radical scientists whose stance on human nature is influenced by politics rather than science 105 Gould stated that he made no attribution of motive in Wilson s or anyone else s case but cautioned that all human beings are influenced especially unconsciously by our personal expectations and biases He wrote I grew up in a family with a tradition of participation in campaigns for social justice and I was active as a student in the civil rights movement at a time of great excitement and success in the early 1960s Scholars are often wary of citing such commitments but it is dangerous for a scholar even to imagine that he might attain complete neutrality for then one stops being vigilant about personal preferences and their influences and then one truly falls victim to the dictates of prejudice Objectivity must be operationally defined as fair treatment of data not absence of preference 106 Gould s primary criticism held that human sociobiological explanations lacked evidential support and argued that adaptive behaviors are frequently assumed to be genetic for no other reason than their supposed universality or their adaptive nature Gould emphasized that adaptive behaviors can be passed on through culture as well and either hypothesis is equally plausible 107 Gould did not deny the relevance of biology to human nature but reframed the debate as biological potentiality vs biological determinism Gould stated that the human brain allows for a wide range of behaviors Its flexibility permits us to be aggressive or peaceful dominant or submissive spiteful or generous Violence sexism and general nastiness are biological since they represent one subset of a possible range of behaviors But peacefulness equality and kindness are just as biological and we may see their influence increase if we can create social structures that permit them to flourish 107 The Mismeasure of Man Edit Main article The Mismeasure of Man Gould was the author of The Mismeasure of Man 1981 a history and inquiry of psychometrics and intelligence testing generating perhaps the greatest controversy of all his books and receiving both widespread praise 108 and extensive criticism 109 110 111 Gould investigated the methods of nineteenth century craniometry as well as the history of psychological testing Gould wrote that both theories developed from an unfounded belief in biological determinism the view that social and economic differences between human groups primarily races classes and sexes arise from inherited inborn distinctions and that society in this sense is an accurate reflection of biology 112 The book was reprinted in 1996 with the addition of a new foreword and a critical review of The Bell Curve In 2011 a study conducted by six anthropologists criticized Gould s claim that Samuel Morton unconsciously manipulated his skull measurements arguing that his analysis of Morton was influenced by his opposition to racism 113 114 115 The group s paper was reviewed in an editorial in the journal Nature which pointed out that the paper s authors might have been influenced by their own motivations recommending a degree of caution stating the critique leaves the majority of Gould s work unscathed and noted that because they couldn t measure all the skulls they do not know whether the average cranial capacities that Morton reported represent his sample accurately 116 The journal stated that Gould s opposition to racism may have biased his interpretation of Morton s data but also noted that Lewis and his colleagues have their own motivations Several in the group have an association with the University of Pennsylvania to whom Morton donated his collection of skulls and have an interest in seeing the valuable but understudied skull collection freed from the stigma of bias and did not accept Gould s theory that the scientific method is inevitably tainted by bias 116 In 2014 the group s paper was critically reviewed in the journal Evolution amp Development by University of Pennsylvania philosopher professor Michael Weisberg who tended to support Gould s original accusations concluding that there is prima facie evidence of a racial bias in Morton s measurements Weisberg concludes that although Gould did make several errors and overstated his case in a number of places Morton s work remains a cautionary example of racial bias in the science of human differences 117 In 2015 biologists and philosophers Jonathan Kaplan Massimo Pigliucci and Joshua Banta published an article arguing that no meaningful conclusions could be drawn from Morton s data They agreed with Gould and disagreed with the 2011 study insofar as Morton s study was seriously flawed but they agreed with the 2011 study insofar as Gould s analysis was in many ways not better than Morton s 118 University of Pennsylvania anthropology doctoral student Paul Wolff Mitchell published an analysis of Morton s original unpublished data which neither Gould nor subsequent commentators had directly addressed Mitchell concluded that Gould s specific argument about Morton s unconscious bias in measurement is not supported but that it was true as Gould had claimed that Morton s racial biases influenced how he reported and interpreted his measurements arguing that Morton s interpretation of his data was arbitrary and tendentious Morton investigated averages and ignored variations in skull size so large that there was significant overlap 119 A contemporary of Morton Friedrich Tiedemann had collected almost identical skull data and drawn conclusions opposite to Morton s on the basis of this overlap arguing strongly against any conception of a racial hierarchy 120 121 Non overlapping magisteria EditMain article Non overlapping magisteria In his book Rocks of Ages 1999 Gould put forward what he described as a blessedly simple and entirely conventional resolution to the supposed conflict between science and religion 122 He defines the term magisterium as a domain where one form of teaching holds the appropriate tools for meaningful discourse and resolution 122 The non overlapping magisteria NOMA principle therefore divides the magisterium of science to cover the empirical realm what the Universe is made of fact and why does it work in this way theory The magisterium of religion extends over questions of ultimate meaning and moral value These two magisteria do not overlap nor do they encompass all inquiry 122 He suggests that NOMA enjoys strong and fully explicit support even from the primary cultural stereotypes of hard line traditionalism and that NOMA is a sound position of general consensus established by long struggle among people of goodwill in both magisteria 122 This view has not been without criticism however In his book The God Delusion Richard Dawkins argues that the division between religion and science is not so simple as Gould claims as few religions exist without claiming the existence of miracles which by definition violate the principles of science 123 Dawkins also opposes the idea that religion has anything meaningful to say about ethics and values and therefore has no authority to claim a magisterium of its own 123 He goes on to say that he believes Gould is bending over backwards to be nice to an unworthy but powerful opponent 124 Similarly humanist philosopher Paul Kurtz argues that Gould was wrong to posit that science has nothing to say about questions of ethics In fact Kurtz claims that science is a much better method than religion for determining moral principles 125 Publications EditArticles Edit Gould s publications were numerous One review of his publications between 1965 and 2000 noted 479 peer reviewed papers 22 books 300 essays 10 and 101 major book reviews 1 Books Edit The following is a list of books either written or edited by Stephen Jay Gould including those published posthumously after his death in 2002 While some books have been republished at later dates by multiple publishers the list below comprises the original publisher and publishing date 1977 Ontogeny and Phylogeny Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 1977 ISBN 978 0 674 63940 9 online preview 1977 Ever Since Darwin New York W W Norton 1977 ISBN 978 0 393 06425 4 1980 The Panda s Thumb New York W W Norton 1980 ISBN 978 0 393 01380 1 1980 Gould Stephen Jay December 1980 The Evolution of Gryphaea New York Arno Press ISBN 978 0 405 12751 9 1981 The Mismeasure of Man New York W W Norton 1996 ISBN 978 0 393 31425 0 1983 Hen s Teeth and Horse s Toes New York W W Norton 1983 ISBN 978 0 393 01716 8 1985 The Flamingo s Smile New York W W Norton 1985 ISBN 978 0 393 02228 5 1987 Time s Arrow Time s Cycle Cambridge MA Harvard Univ Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 674 89198 2 online preview 1987 An Urchin in the Storm Essays about Books and Ideas New York W W Norton 1987 ISBN 978 0 393 02492 0 1987 with Rosamond Wolff Purcell Illuminations A Bestiary New York W W Norton January 10 1987 ISBN 978 0 393 30436 7 1989 Wonderful Life The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History New York W W Norton 1989 Bibcode 1989wlbs book G ISBN 978 0 393 02705 1 347 pp 1991 Bully for Brontosaurus New York W W Norton 1991 ISBN 978 0 393 02961 1 540 pp 1992 with Rosamond Wolff Purcell Finders Keepers Eight Collectors New York W W Norton 1992 ISBN 978 0 393 03054 9 1993 Eight Little Piggies New York W W Norton 1993 ISBN 978 0 393 03416 5 1993 The Book of Life Preface pp 6 21 New York W W Norton S J Gould general editor 10 contributors ISBN 0 393 05003 3 review citing original publishing date 1995 Dinosaur in a Haystack New York Harmony Books 1995 ISBN 978 0 517 70393 9 1996 Full House The Spread of Excellence From Plato to Darwin New York Harmony Books 1996 Bibcode 1996fhse book G ISBN 978 0 517 70394 6 1997 Questioning the Millennium A Rationalist s Guide to a Precisely Arbitrary Countdown New York Harmony Books 1999 ISBN 978 0 609 60541 7 1998 Leonardo s Mountain of Clams and the Diet of Worms New York Harmony Books 1998 ISBN 978 0 609 60141 9 1999 Rocks of Ages Science and Religion in the Fullness of Life New York Ballantine Books January 1 1999 ISBN 978 0 345 43009 0 2000 The Lying Stones of Marrakech New York Harmony Books 2000 ISBN 978 0 609 60142 6 2000 Crossing Over Where Art and Science Meet New York Three Rivers Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 609 80586 2 2002 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press March 21 2002 ISBN 978 0 674 00613 3 online preview 2002 I Have Landed The End of a Beginning in Natural History New York Harmony Books 2002 ISBN 978 0 609 60143 3 2003 Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville A Lifelong Passion for Baseball New York W W Norton 2003 ISBN 978 0 393 05755 3 2003 The Hedgehog the Fox and the Magister s Pox New York Harmony Books 2003 ISBN 978 0 609 60140 2 2006 The Richness of Life the Essential Stephen Jay Gould London Jonathan Cape 2007 ISBN 978 0 09 948867 5 This is an anthology of Gould s writings edited by Paul McGarr and Steven Rose introduced by Steven Rose 2007 Punctuated Equilibrium Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 674 02444 1 Book reviewNotes and references Edit a b c d e Shermer Michael 2002 This View of Science PDF Social Studies of Science 32 4 489 525 doi 10 1177 0306312702032004001 PMID 12503565 S2CID 220879229 Stephen Jay Gould Ph D Biography and Interview www achievement org American Academy of Achievement a b Eldredge Niles and S J Gould 1972 Punctuated equilibria an alternative to phyletic gradualism In T J M Schopf ed Models in Paleobiology San Francisco Freeman Cooper and Company pp 82 115 Sepkoski David 2012 Rereading the Fossil Record The Growth of Paleobiology as an Evolutionary Discipline ISBN 978 0226748580 Muller Gerd B 2013 Beyond Spandrels Stephen J Gould EvoDevo and the Extended Synthesis In Danieli G Minelli A Pievani T eds Stephen J Gould The Scientific Legacy pp 85 99 doi 10 1007 978 88 470 5424 0 6 ISBN 978 88 470 5423 3 Gould S J 1997 Nonoverlapping magisteria Archived June 15 2021 at the Wayback Machine Natural History 106 March 16 22 a b Tattersall I Remembering Stephen Jay Gould Retrieved June 7 2013 Library of Congress Living Legend Stephen Jay Gould Library of Congress Retrieved June 7 2013 Fahy Declan 2015 The New Celebrity Scientists Out of the Lab and into the Limelight Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers a b Gould S J 2001 I have landed Natural History 109 10 46 59 Retrieved June 1 2018 Peter D Gould 50 Broadway Designer The New York Times October 18 1994 a b c Yoon Carol Kaesuk May 21 2002 Stephen Jay Gould 60 Is Dead Enlivened Evolutionary Theory The New York Times a b Green Michelle 1986 Stephen Jay Gould driven by a hunger to learn and to write People 25 June 2 109 114 Milner Richard 1990 The Encyclopedia of Evolution NY Facts on File p 198 In a January 25 2001 interview for BBC Radio 4 Gould stated Atheists can be highly moral people I trust I am myself 27m 37s Biologist Jerry Coyne who had Gould on his thesis committee described him as a diehard atheist if there ever was one Sam Harris 2015 Faith vs Fact An Interview with Jerry Coyne Archived October 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine May 19 12m 22s www samharris org Gould s close friend Oliver Sacks labeled Gould a Jewish atheist Oliver Sacks 2006 Introduction The Richness of Life W W Norton p 8 Gould S J 1995 The Pattern of Life s History Archived April 30 2019 at the Wayback Machine In John Brockman ed The Third Culture Archived April 30 2019 at the Wayback Machine New York Simon amp Schuster p 60 a b Gould S J 2002 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory Cambridge Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 1018 ISBN 0 674 00613 5 a b Gould S J 1981 Official Transcript for Gould s deposition in McLean v Arkansas Nov 27 Under oath Gould stated My political views tend to the left of center Q Could you be more specific about your political views A I don t know how to be I am not a joiner so I am not a member of any organization So I have always resisted labeling But if you read my other book The Mismeasure of Man which is not included because it is not about evolution you will get a sense of my political views p 153 Perez Myrna 2013 Evolutionary Activism Stephen Jay Gould the New Left and Sociobiology PDF Endeavour 37 2 104 11 doi 10 1016 j endeavour 2012 10 002 PMID 23643447 Gasper Phil 2002 Stephen Jay Gould Archived November 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Dialectical Biologist International Socialist Review 24 July August Lewontin Richard and Richard Levins 2002 Stephen Jay Gould what does it mean to be a radical Archived March 17 2011 at the Wayback Machine Monthly Review 54 Nov 1 a b Gould S J 2003 Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville New York W W Norton amp Co See his essays The Streak of Streaks Gould S J 1993 Dinomania New York Review of Books 40 August 12 51 56 Gould S J 2000 The True Embodiment of Everything That s Excellent The Strange Adventure of Gilbert and Sullivan The American Scholar 69 20 35 49 Archived from the original on April 30 2019 Retrieved August 11 2016 Gould S J 1983 Hen s Teeth and Horse s Toes New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 31103 1 Golden Frederic 1996 A Kinder Gentler Stephen Jay Gould Los Angeles Times Oct 8 Rose Steve 2002 Obituary Stephen Jay Gould The Guardian May 22 Titus Janet 1983 Safety Precautions for Asbestos Taken at MCZ The Harvard Crimson January 24 a b Gould S J 1985 The Median Isn t the Message Discover 6 June 40 42 Bakalar James and Lester Grinspoon 1997 Marihuana the Forbidden Medicine New Haven Yale University Press pp 39 41 Archived November 26 2015 at the Wayback Machine Chwialkowska Luiza 1995 Marijuana Helped to Save My Life Prominent Harvard Scholar Says Ottawa Citizen Harvard News Office 2002 Paleontologist author Gould dies at 60 The Harvard Gazette May 20 Retrieved on June 4 2009 Associated Press 2005 Family of Stephen Jay Gould sues doctors hospital Krementz Jill 2002 Jill Krementz Photo Journal New York Social Diary Retrieved on June 4 2009 a b Allen Warren 2008 The Structure of Gould Archived March 28 2016 at the Wayback Machine In Warren Allen et al Stephen Jay Gould Reflections on His View of Life Oxford Oxford University Press pp 24 59 Jones Steve 2002 Stephen Jay Gould The Guardian May 22 International Palaeontological Union I P U 1968 Westermann G E G ed Directory of Palaeontologists of the World excl Soviet Union amp continental China 2 ed Hamilton Ontario McMaster University p 41 Retrieved January 3 2017 via Internet Archive Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Cooper E and D Amber 1997 Stephen Jay Gould Voted President Elect of AAAS AAAS News Linnean Society of London 2008 The Darwin Wallace Medal Retrieved on June 4 2009 Eldredge Niles 1971 The Allopatric Model and Phylogeny in Paleozoic Invertebrates Archived June 30 2016 at the Wayback Machine Evolution Vol 25 No 1 Mar 1971 pp 156 167 Dawkins Richard 1999 The Extended Phenotype Oxfordshire Oxford University Press p 101 Archived August 8 2020 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 19 288051 9 a b Maynard Smith John 1984 Paleontology at the high table Nature 309 5967 401 402 Bibcode 1984Natur 309 401S doi 10 1038 309401a0 S2CID 31031206 Mayr Ernst 1992 Speciational Evolution or Punctuated Equilibria In Steven Peterson and Albert Somit The Dynamics of Evolution Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 21 48 ISBN 0 8014 9763 9 Dawkins Richard 1986 The Blind Watchmaker New York W W Norton amp Company p 225 Turner John 1984 Why we need evolution by jerks New Scientist 101 Feb 9 34 35 Gould S J and Steven Rose ed 2007 The Richness of Life The Essential Stephen Jay Gould New York W W Norton amp Co p 6 Thomas R D K 2009 Gould Stephen Jay 1941 2002 in M Ruse and J Travis eds Evolution The First Four Billion Years Cambridge MA Belknap Press pp 611 615 Prum R O Brush A H 2003 Which Came First the Feather or the Bird Scientific American 288 3 84 93 Bibcode 2003SciAm 288c 84P doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0303 84 PMID 12616863 a b Gould S J Lewontin Richard 1979 The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm a critique of the adaptationist programme Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 205 1161 581 98 Bibcode 1979RSPSB 205 581G doi 10 1098 rspb 1979 0086 PMID 42062 S2CID 2129408 for background see Gould s The Pattern of Life s History Archived April 14 2015 at the Wayback Machine in John Brockman The Third Culture Archived January 30 2016 at the Wayback Machine New York Simon amp Schuster 1996 pp 52 64 ISBN 0 684 82344 6 Gould S J Vrba E 1982 Exaptation a missing term in the science of form PDF Paleobiology 8 1 4 15 doi 10 1017 S0094837300004310 S2CID 86436132 Wilson E O 1975 Sociobiology The New Synthesis Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Allen Elizabeth et al 1975 Against Sociobiology letter New York Review of Books 22 Nov 13 182 184 186 Gould S J 1980 Sociobiology and the Theory of Natural Selection In G W Barlow and J Silverberg eds Sociobiology Beyond Nature Nurture Boulder CO Westview Press pp 257 269 ITC 1908 International Library of Technology 38 3 22 a b Mark Robert 1996 Architecture and Evolution American Scientist July August 383 389 Gould S J 1997 The exaptive excellence of spandrels as a term and prototype Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 94 20 10750 10755 Bibcode 1997PNAS 9410750G doi 10 1073 pnas 94 20 10750 PMC 23474 PMID 11038582 Maynard Smith John November 30 1995 Genes Memes amp Minds The New York Review of Books pp 46 48 By and large I think their Spandrels paper had a healthy effect Their critique forced us to clean up our act and to provide evidence for our stories But adaptationism remains the core of biological thinking Mayr Ernst March 1983 How to Carry Out the Adaptationist Program PDF The American Naturalist 121 3 324 334 doi 10 1086 284064 S2CID 3937726 Williams George C 1992 Natural Selection Domains Levels and Challenges New York City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195069334 Lloyd Elisabeth Anne 2005 The Case of The Female Orgasm Bias in the science of evolution Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 674 04030 4 OCLC 432675780 via Internet Archive Gould S J 1992 Male Nipples and Clitoral Ripples Archived September 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine In Bully for Brontosaurus Further Reflections in Natural History New York W W Norton pp 124 138 Dennett Daniel 1995 Darwin s Dangerous Idea New York Penguin Books p 272 a b Gould S J 1996 Full House The Spread of Excellence From Plato to Darwin New York Harmony Books Dawkins Richard 1997 Human chauvinism Evolution 51 3 1015 1020 doi 10 2307 2411179 JSTOR 2411179 S2CID 87940833 archived from the original on June 1 2008 Gould Jay January 1997 Stephen Jay Gould Mother Jones Interview Interviewed by Michael Krasny talk show host San Francisco Mother Jones Magazine Gould S J 1991 The disparity of the Burgess Shale arthropod fauna and the limits of cladistic analysis Archived January 27 2018 at the Wayback Machine Paleobiology 17 October 411 423 Baron Christian and J T Hoeg 2005 Gould Scharm and the Paleontologocal Perspective in Evolutionary Biology In S Koenemann and R A Jenner Crustacea and Arthropod Relationships CRC Press pp 3 14 ISBN 0 8493 3498 5 Wolpert Lewis and Alison Richards 1998 A Passion For Science Oxford Oxford University Press pp 139 152 Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 19 854212 7 Gould S J 1996 A Cerion for Christopher Natural History 105 Oct 22 29 78 79 Google Scholar https scholar google com Retrieved on June 12 2011 Prothero Donald Skeptic Festschrift lecture for Stephen Jay Gould Skeptic com Skeptic Society Archived from the original on July 7 2015 Retrieved July 6 2015 Shermer Michael 2002 This View of Science PDF Social Studies of Science 32 4 518 doi 10 1177 0306312702032004001 PMID 12503565 S2CID 220879229 de Mythe Johannes 2000 Van de Schoonheid en de Troost Episode 13 Hilversum Netherlands Gould S J 1982 Nonmoral Nature Archived November 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine Natural History 91 Feb 19 26 National Center for Science Education 2003 Project Steve www ncse com Retrieved August 25 2015 The Pantheon of Skeptics CSI Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Archived from the original on January 31 2017 Retrieved April 30 2017 PBS 1984 Stephen Jay Gould This View of Life NOVA December 18 CNN Talkback Live August 9 1996 Crossfire August 17 1999 Kayzer Wim 1993 Een schitterend ongeluk Netherlands VPRO See also Oliver Sacks 2007 Forward In Steven Rose ed The Richness of Life New York W W Norton amp Company p xi PBS 1987 3 2 1 Contact Dinosaur Detectives October 27 Mammals Rats and Bats November 2 Advisory Council ncse com National Center for Science Education Archived from the original on August 10 2013 Retrieved October 30 2018 Fox The Simpsons Lisa the Skeptic November 23 1997 Audio clip Scully Mike 2006 The Simpsons Season 9 DVD Commentary for Lisa the Skeptic DVD 20th Century Fox Shermer Michael 2002 This View of Science Social Studies of Science 32 4 518 Awards include a National Book Award for The Panda s Thumb a National Book Critics Circle Award for The Mismeasure of Man the Phi Beta Kappa Book Award for Hen s Teeth and Horse s Toes and a Pulitzer Prize Finalist for Wonderful Life on which Gould commented close but as they say no cigar Forty four honorary degrees and 66 major fellowships medals and awards bear witness to the depth and scope of his accomplishments in both the sciences and humanities Member of the National Academy of Sciences President and Fellow of AAAS MacArthur Foundation genius Fellowship in the first group of awardees Humanist Laureate from the Academy of Humanism Fellow of the Linnean Society of London Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Fellow of the European Union of Geosciences Associate of the Museum National D Histoire Naturelle Paris the Schuchert Award for excellence in paleontological research Scientist of the Year from Discover magazine the Silver Medal from the Zoological Society of London the Gold Medal for Service to Zoology from the Linnean Society of London the Edinburgh Medal from the City of Edinburgh the Britannica Award and Gold Medal for dissemination of public knowledge Public Service Award from the Geological Society of America Anthropology in Media Award from the American Anthropological Association Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of Biology Teachers Distinguished Scientist Award from UCLA the Randi Award for Skeptic of the Year from the Skeptics Society and a Festschrift in his honour at Caltech These are the first two paragraphs with notes from an unpublished Letter to the Editor of The New York Review of Books by Leda Cosmides and John Tooby July 7 1997 They wrote in comment on two NYRB articles by Gould June 12 and 26 John Maynard Smith one of the world s leading evolutionary biologists recently summarized in the NYRB the sharply conflicting assessments of Stephen Jay Gould Because of the excellence of his essays he has come to be seen by non biologists as the pre eminent evolutionary theorist In contrast the evolutionary biologists with whom I have discussed his work tend to see him as a man whose ideas are so confused as to be hardly worth bothering with but as one who should not be publicly criticized because he is at least on our side against the creationists NYRB November 30 1995 p 46 No one can take any pleasure in the evident pain Gould is experiencing now that his actual standing within the community of professional evolutionary biologists is finally becoming more widely known If what was a stake was solely one man s self regard common decency would preclude comment But as Maynard Smith points out more is at stake Gould is giving non biologists a largely false picture of the state of evolutionary theory or as Ernst Mayr says of Gould and his small group of allies they quite conspicuously misrepresent the views of biology s leading spokesmen 1 Indeed although Gould characterizes his critics as anonymous and a tiny coterie nearly every major evolutionary biologist of our era has weighed in a vain attempt to correct the tangle of confusions that the higher profile Gould has inundated the intellectual world with 2 The point is not that Gould is the object of some criticism so properly are we all it is that his reputation as a credible and balanced authority about evolutionary biology is non existent among those who are in a professional position to know 1 Mayr Ernst 1988 Toward a new philosophy of biology Harvard University Press pp 534 535 2 These include Ernst Mayr John Maynard Smith George Williams Bill Hamilton Richard Dawkins E O Wilson Tim Clutton Brock Paul Harvey Brian Charlesworth Jerry Coyne Robert Trivers John Alcock Randy Thornhill and many others Note Where Tooby and Cosmides quote Ernst Mayr Mayr does not mention Gould by name but is speaking generally of the critics of the Neo Darwinian Synthesis Also the list of major biologists provided by Tooby and Cosmides may not be fairly represented E g Mayr Williams Dawkins and Coyne have expressed public admiration for Gould as a scientist In the first of his two articles that provoked Tooby and Cosmides Gould had commented on the November 1995 review of his work by Maynard Smith Gould Darwinian Fundamentalism New York Review of Books 44 June 12 1997 34 37 A false fact can be refuted a false argument exposed but how can one respond to a purely ad hominem attack This harder and altogether more discouraging task may best be achieved by exposing internal inconsistency and unfairness of rhetoric quotation of Smith s criticism of Gould November 1995 NYRB dd It seems futile to reply to an attack so empty of content and based only on comments by anonymous critics Instead of responding to Maynard Smith s attack against my integrity and scholarship citing people unknown and with arguments unmentioned let me instead merely remind him of the blatant inconsistency between his admirable past and lamentable present Some sixteen years ago he wrote a highly critical but wonderfully supportive review of my early book of essays The Panda s Thumb stating I hope it will be obvious that my wish to argue with Gould is a compliment not a criticism He then attended my series of Tanner Lectures at Cambridge in 1984 and wrote in a report for Nature and under the remarkable title Paleontology at the High Table the kindest and most supportive critical commentary I have ever received He argued that the work of a small group of American paleobiologists had brought the entire subject back to theoretical centrality within the evolutionary sciences So we face the enigma of a man who has written numerous articles amounting to tens of thousands of words about my work always strongly and incisively critical always richly informed and always I might add enormously appreciated by me But now Maynard Smith needs to canvass unnamed colleagues to find out that my ideas are hardly worth bothering with He really ought to be asking himself why he has been bothering about my work so intensely and for so many years Brown Andrew 1999 The Darwin Wars The Scientific Battle for the Soul of Man London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 8050 7137 7 a b Sterelny Kim 2007 Dawkins vs Gould Survival of the Fittest Cambridge UK Icon Books ISBN 978 1 84046 780 2 Also ISBN 978 1 84046 780 2 Maynard Smith John 1981 Did Darwin get it right The London Review of Books 3 11 10 11 Also reprinted in Did Darwin Get it Right New York Chapman and Hall 1989 pp 148 156 Maynard Smith John 1995 Genes Memes amp Minds The New York Review of Books 42 Nov 30 46 48 Maynard Smith John 1981 Review of The Panda s Thumb The London Review of Books pp 17 30 Reprinted as Tinkering in his Did Darwin Get It Right New York Chapman and Hall 1989 pp 94 97 Wright Robert 1999 The Accidental Creationist Why Stephen J Gould is bad for evolution Archived November 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine The New Yorker 75 Dec 13 56 65 Gould S J 1981 Evolution as fact and theory Discover 2 May 34 37 Dawkins Richard 1998 Unweaving the Rainbow Boston Houghton Mifflin pp 196 197 It is when we ask what happens during the sudden bursts of species formation that the confusion arises Gould is aware of the difference between rapid gradualism and macromutation but he treats the matter as though it were a minor detail to be cleared up after we have taken on board the overarching question of whether evolution is episodic rather than gradual Fraud in the Imputation of Fraud Psychology Today www psychologytoday com Retrieved January 24 2022 Conway Morris S Gould S J 1998 Showdown on the Burgess Shale Natural History 107 48 55 Archived from the original on December 10 2010 Retrieved January 4 2006 Conway Morris Simon 2003 Life s Solution Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe Cambridge Cambridge University Press Fortey Richard 1998 Shock Lobsters Archived August 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine London Review of Books 20 Oct 1 Briggs Derek Fortey Richard 2005 Wonderful Strife systematics stem groups and the phylogenetic signal of the Cambrian radiation PDF Paleobiology 31 2 94 112 doi 10 1666 0094 8373 2005 031 0094 WSSSGA 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 44066226 Archived from the original PDF on August 12 2016 Retrieved June 17 2016 Abstract Kemp Thomas 2016 Origin of Higher Taxa Chicago University of Chicago Press p 88 Dawkins Richard 1998 Unweaving the Rainbow p 202 Gould S J 2002 The Structure of Evolutionary Theory Cambridge Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 1156 ISBN 0 674 00613 5 Gould S J 1997 Evolution The pleasures of pluralism Archived November 10 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 44 June 26 47 52 Wilson E O 2006 Naturalist New York Island Press p 337 ISBN 1 59726 088 6 Pinker Steven 2002 The Blank Slate The Modern Denial of Human Nature New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 200334 3 Gould S J 1996 The Mismeasure of Man Revised and Expanded Edition Archived November 29 2015 at the Wayback Machine New York W W Norton amp Co p 36 ISBN 0 14 025824 8 a b Gould S J 1992 Biological potentiality vs biological determinism In Ever Since Darwin New York W W Norton amp Co pp 251 259 In 1981 The Mismeasure of Man won the National Book Critics Circle Award for non fiction It was voted as the 17th greatest science book of all time by Discover magazine vol 27 December 8 2006 9th best skeptic book by The Skeptics Society Frank Diller Scientists Nightstand American Scientist and ranked 24th place for the best non fiction book by the Modern Library Korb Kevin B August 1994 Stephen Jay Gould on intelligence Cognition 52 2 111 123 doi 10 1016 0010 0277 94 90064 7 PMID 7924200 S2CID 10514854 Retrieved December 30 2022 Humphreys Lloyd Autumn 1983 The Mismeasure of Man American Journal of Psychology 96 3 407 416 doi 10 2307 1422323 JSTOR 1422323 Retrieved December 30 2022 Blinkhorn Steve 1982 What Skulduggery Archived November 23 2015 at the Wayback Machine Nature 296 April 8 506 Gould S J 1981 The Mismeasure of Man New York W W Norton amp Co p 20 Gould S J 1978 Morton s Ranking of Races by Cranial Capacity Archived November 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine Science 200 May 5 503 509 Lewis J DeGusta D Meyer M R Monge J M Mann A E Holloway R L 2011 The Mismeasure of Science Stephen Jay Gould versus Samuel George Morton on Skulls and Bias PLOS Biology 9 6 e1001071 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001071 PMC 3110184 PMID 21666803 Wade Nicholas 2011 Scientists Measure the Accuracy of a Racism Claim New York Times June 14 D4 a b Editorial 2011 Mismeasure for mismeasure Nature 474 23 June 419 Weisberg M 2014 Remeasuring man Evolution amp Development 16 166 178 doi 10 1111 ede 12077 Kaplan Michael Jonathan Pigliucci Massimo Alexander Banta Joshua 2015 Gould on Morton Redux What can the debate reveal about the limits of data PDF Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 30 1 10 Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2015 Retrieved April 28 2015 Mitchell P W 2018 The fault in his seeds Lost notes to the case of bias in Samuel George Morton s cranial race science Public Library of Science Biology 16 10 e2007008 Ars Technica There s new evidence confirming bias of the father of scientific racism Mitchell P W and Michael J S 2019 Bias Brains and Skulls Tracing the Legacy of Scientific Racism in the Nineteenth Century Works of Samuel George Morton and Friedrich Tiedemann In Jackson Christina and Thomas Jamie eds Embodied Difference Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse Lanham MD Rowman and Littefield pp 77 98 ISBN 978 1 4985 6386 4 Retrieved 2019 07 26 a b c d Gould S J 2002 Rocks of Ages Science and Religion in the Fullness of Life New York Ballantine Books a b Dawkins Richard 2006 The God Delusion New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 83 Dawkins Richard 2006 The God Delusion New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 81 Grothe DJ December 11 2005 Paul Kurtz Science and Religion Are They Compatible Point of Inquiry Podcast Center for Inquiry Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved January 18 2014 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Stephen Jay Gould Unofficial Stephen Jay Gould Archive archived from the original on August 20 2014 retrieved February 27 2022 Stephen Jay Gould Ph D Biography and Interview with American Academy of Achievement Stephen J Gould Rare Books Collection Stanford University Stephen Jay Gould on Charlie Rose Appearances on C SPAN Stephen Jay Gould papers at Stanford University Libraries Portals Biography Evolutionary biology History of science Paleontology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stephen Jay Gould amp oldid 1133168511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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