Essentialism and Evolution

I have to admit to having taught students that essentialism - the belief that species have an essence and thus could not evolve - was prevalent prior to Darwin. This was something I got from reading the writings of Ernst Mayr. Now along comes John Wilkins who argues "essentialism in biology postdates Darwin, and was in fact due to the revival of Thomism among German and French speaking Catholic biologists who were reacting to the metaphysical views of people like Herbert Spencer and Ernst Haeckel." He notes that Aquinas' De ente et essentia [link] is the first example of the "argument from essence" (if I can coin a phrase) that he can find. He also notes that Aquinas' view was not a majority position.

Read John's post to find out why the myth of prevalent essentialism rose among, what he terms, "history-plundering evolutionists" [Insert pirate Arrrrrrrrrrrrrr here].

More like this

Those of you who live near San Francisco might be interested in this talk I'm giving at the Pizza Munch gathering at UC Berkeley in November. For November we've made arrangements to meet jointly with the Bay Area Biosystematists in Berkeley on Thursday, November 9. John Wilkins (Queensland) will…
Nearly ten years ago I started a book on Creationist misuse of intellectual history. I never finished it, which is probably for the best. The file is unfortunately MIA and all I have remaining was a section that I turned into a talk that I gave at ASU in 1999. Over the next few days, I'll be…
Marc Ereshfsky's entry on "Species" in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has been updated, though not to remove the classic "Essentialism Story" that has been called into question by a number of scholars lately. Under the fold, I will quote Marc's comments and critique them. [I can do this…
[This is another repost from my old blog. I am sitting at home suffering with a hole in my jaw where a tooth, or its remnants was extracted with extreme prejudice, so I don't feel much like blogging.] The evil that men do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their bones; So let it be…

I've been following the whole back-and-forth between Chris, Brandon and John over the past few days and it is very enlightening!

Oh great! Now I have this vision of Mayr with an eye patch, and a parrot, saying "Why are systematists the best pirates? They just arrrrrrre..."

I won't sleep tonight.

If I was any good at Photoshop, I'd have to make a pic. But I'm not, so ...

By John Lynch (not verified) on 23 Mar 2006 #permalink