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Richard Owen’s archetype

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009 | Comparative Anatomy, History of Science, Personalities
Caricature of Richard Owen. "Old Bones" <em>Vanity Fair</em>, March 1st, 1873.

Caricature of Richard Owen. "Old Bones" Vanity Fair, March 1st, 1873.

I named this blog after the concept of the archetype as articulated by the Victorian naturalist Richard Owen (1804-1892). For Owen, the archetype was a representation that summed the most basic, most generalized structural arrangement common to all the members of a given group of organisms. Owen’s well-known and most important contribution to modern biological thought is, however, not his archetype concept but the clear distinction he provided between the concepts of analogy and homology. On his words:

Analogue.- A part or organ in one animal which has the same function as another part or organ in a different animal.
Homologue.- The same organ in different animals under every variety of form and function. (Owen, 1843: 374, 379)1

Homology is a concept that expresses the relationship between parts of organisms. It reflects the observation that we can identify a commonality of structure across the diversity of life. Homology thus forms the cornerstone of comparative biology.

Although the archetype is a forgotten concept, this abstract blueprint was central to Owen’s views on homology. During his lectures and in his publications, Owen distinguish between three kinds of relations of homology: special homology, serial homology and general homology. Special homology refers to the correspondence of body parts between species. Serial homology identifies the repeated elements within the body of an organism. General homology represents the correspondence of an element between a species and the archetype.

Both special homology and serial homology are in common use today, the former is particularly applied in systematics where it is translated into characters for phylogenetic reconstruction and is understood as similarity due to common ancestry. General homology, in contrast, together with the archetype are seldom mentioned today, if only when discussing the ideas of nineteen-century naturalists mostly in an historical context.

A crucial event in the history of these concepts is Charles Darwin’s famous transformation of Owen’s archetype into an ancestor:

If we suppose that the ancient progenitor, the archetype as it may be called, of all mammals, had its limbs constructed on the existing general pattern, for whatever purpose they serve, we can at once perceive the plain signification of the homologous construction of the limbs throughout the whole class. (Darwin, 1859: 435)2

This move allowed Darwin to align the greatest achievement of morphology, the Unity of Type, under the umbrella of evolution as the most important evidence of species common decent: “On my theory, unity of type is explained by unity of decent.” 3 The switch from abstract archetype to material ancestor effectively relegated the archetype and the associated concept of general homology to proto-evolutionary historical curiosities.

Two contrasting readings of the historical development of the theory of evolution are important for us to understand the significance (or lack of) of the archetype. The received or classical view, reflected in the works of Mayr4, Ghiselin5 and Hull6 for example, equates the typological notions of pre-Darwinian authors (like the archetype) with a sort of essentialism that is antagonistic to evolutionary thinking: essentialism implies stasis, as opposed to change, and implies adherence to a type, as opposed to the realization that species are composed of variable populations (i.e., Mayr’s “population thinking”). Under this view, the commitment to essentialism through typological thinking displayed by authors like Richard Owen prevented them for thinking in evolutionary terms and accepting naturalistic origins of species. Under this view, the archetype is a vacuous concept, a dead-end.

The alternative view, articulated recently in the works of Winsor7, Amundson8 and Rupke9 for example, argues that while it is true that typological views are pervasive in the work of naturalists before and contemporaneous to Darwin, those views by no means equate to the sort of essentialism caricatured by proponents of the classical view. Instead, it is exactly this typological thinking, with its notions of shared morphological architectures and hierarchical arrangement of types, that allowed Darwin to recruit the findings of comparative anatomists and taxonomists as evidence for his evolutionary theory. Under this view, the archetype is not a dead-end but the result of valid inductive generalizations about reconstructed patterns of similarities between species, patterns that cry for explanation 10. Typology, they argue, is not antagonistic to evolutionary thinking but it is an important part of it.

I am more sympathetic with the second, alternative view. Though it is still not a popular one. But one thing is for sure. Whether the archetype is a vacuous concept or an important evolutionary precursor, it is the most elegant concept that came out of comparative anatomy from Victorian times.

References

  1. Owen, R. 1843. Lectures on the comparative anatomy and physiology of the invertebrate animals. London: Longman Brown Green and Longmans ↩
  2. Darwin, C. 1859. On the Origin of Species (1964) Cambridge Mass. Harvard University Press ↩
  3. Ibid p. 206. ↩
  4. Mayr, E. 1964. Introduction to On the Origin of Species by C. Darwin. 1859. Cambridge Mass. Harvard University Press: vii-xxvii ↩
  5. Ghiselin, M.T. 1969. The triumph of the Darwinian method. Berkeley, CA. University of California Press ↩
  6. Hull, D.L.: 1983, Darwin and the Nature of Science, in D.S. Bendall (ed.), Evolution from Molecules to Men, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ↩
  7. Winsor, M. P. 2003. Non-essentialist methods in pre-Darwinian taxonomy. Biology and Philosophy 18:387-400 ↩
  8. Amundson, R. 1998. Typology Reconsidered: Two Doctrines on the History of Evolutionary Biology . Biology and Philosophy. 13, 153-177. Amundson, R. 2005. The Changing Role of the Embryo in Evolutionary Thought : Roots of Evo-Devo. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ↩
  9. Rupke, N. 1994. Richard Owen: Victorian Naturalist, Yale University Press, New Haven, CT. ↩
  10. Camardi, G. 2001. Richard Owen, Morphology and Evolution. Journal of the History of Biology 34, 481-515. ↩
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Tags: Analogy, Archetype, Essentialism, Homology, Population thinking, Richard Owen, Typological thinking, Typology, Unity of Type

8 Comments to Richard Owen’s archetype

1
Carol Hart
March 5, 2009

An elegant, informative and finely crafted essay. Enjoyed it very much.

2
Polly Winsor
March 17, 2009

The University of Chicago Press has recently published a reprint of Owen’s little 1849 book “On the Nature of Limbs,” which he wrote to explain to a popular audience the concepts he had already published for his fellow anatomists.

3
The Newton of Natural History who never was | Archetype
July 8, 2009

[...] have previously wrote about Owen’s archetype and his clarification of the terms homology and analogy, concepts that form the cornerstone of [...]

4
andrea delgado
January 31, 2010

esta super bueno pero no encontre lo que necesitaba

5
Gary Nelson
March 4, 2010

The history is a little older, going back at least to Denis Diderot (1713-1734). I won’t belabor the point, but quote briefly from his Thoughts on the interpretation of nature (from Thought 12):
“If we consider the animal kingdom, and observe that, among the mammals, every single one possesses functions and bodily parts — especially internal organs — fully resembling those of any other mammal, is it not easy to believe that in the beginning there was only a single animal which served as prototype for all the others, and that all nature has done is to lengthen, shorten, alter, multiply or eliminate certain organs. Imagine the fingers of the hand joined together, with the substance of the nails so extended and thickened that that it engulfs and covers the whole; then, instead of a human hand, you would have a horse’s hoof.”

6
Gary Nelson
March 4, 2010

Sorry, the correct dates for Diderot are 1713-1784.

7
Roberto Keller
March 4, 2010

That’s quite a clear quote on the idea, thank you for bringing it out to my attention. Is prototype the only term used by Diderot?

8
John
August 9, 2010

You have said:
“Both special homology and serial homology are in common use today, the former is particularly applied in systematics where it is translated into characters for phylogenetic reconstruction and is understood as similarity due to common ancestry.”

But what is the common use tday of “serial homology”. Is that anagenesis?

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