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3/12/2016 3:59 am  #1


Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

A Thomist would say that two dogs have the same essence, two cows have the same essence, but cows and dogs have distinct essences.

Modern evolutionary theory says that cows and dogs have a most recent common ancestor – Laurasiatheria. For ease of typing, I will nickname Laurasiatheria "dogcow". Despite that name, we must be clear that it probably didn't look anything like a dog or a cow, or some kind of hybrid/mix of the two; while we can't be entirely sure about its appearance, it probably most closely resembled a rat or a mouse. If we are to apply the Thomistic theory of essence to dogcows, surely we must conclude that dogcow is a different essence from both dogs and cows.

The problem then, is that starting at any individual dog, we can trace a line of descent back to one or more individual dogcows. To simplify the problem slightly, let's consider the maternal line of descent only. For any individual dog, there is a maternal line of descent back to an individual dogcow ancestor.

As a general rule, it appears true that the child must always have the same essence as the mother. Dogs give birth to dogs, not cows; a human woman does not give birth to a pig (in the absence of any perverse scientific shennagians, such as transplanting a pig foetus into her womb). But, in order for an animal having one essence (dog), to be descended from another with a distinct (and rather different) essence (dogcow), there must have been some generation in which a mother gave birth to offspring having a different essence from hers. Yet this contradicts the general rule that the child always has the same essence as the mother.

We can ask ourselves, why do we have good reason to suppose that dogs have a common essence? Surely, the principal reason is the visible similarity of their physical forms, and also the similarities in their behaviour. The same point applies to cows. And do we have good reason to suppose that cows and dogs have a different essence? Surely, the principal reason is the visible dissimilarity of their physical forms, and the dissimilarity of their behaviour. The ability of dogs to interbreed is also a reason to suppose that dogs have a common essence (likewise cows); and the inability of cows and dogs to successfully breed with each other is a reason to suppose they have different essences.

Now, consider each generation in the maternal line of descent from dogcow to dog. In each generation, there is a visible similarity of physical form between mother and child, and many similarities in behaviour. Even though mother and child almost always appear slightly different, and behave slightly differently, these differences are always small enough that we could not suppose they have different essences. Furthermore, the fact that mother and (male) child are physically capable of interbreeding is evidence that they have the same essence. (No doubt, such interbreeding is very often deleterious, but that is besides the point; the fact that breeding between the two is physically possible is evidence that parent and offspring are the same species. While I agree that incest is immoral in humans, I don't think it makes sense to label the behaviour of non-human animals as immoral, and it appears that many, even most, non-human animals lack the innate aversion to incest which most humans possess.)

This then is the fundamental problem: in the maternal descent from dogcow to dog, we have a succession of individuals; we have every reason to suppose that each individual is of the same essence as its mother, but that forces us to the conclusion that dogcows have the same essence as dogs. But if dogcows have the same essence as dogs, then by the same reasoning dogcows must have the same essence as cows; hence, by the law of identity, dogs and cows must have the same essence; which contradicts our earlier statement that their essences were distinct.

This is an ontological problem not an epistemeological problem; the problem is not that there is some unknown line in this succession of generations dividing dogcow from dog (or, more likely, multiple such lines, dividing the succession of individuals into a succession of essences, with dogcow the initial essence and dog the final one); the problem is not that there is such a line but we don't know where it is, the problem is that we have no good reason to suppose any such line exists.

I think, nominalism works much better with modern evolutionary theory than Aristotelian realism (or Platonic realism); dogs and cows are part of a continuum of individual descent, we've assigned names to particular points in this continuum, and when we ask "what is this?" we are really just asking "which of our named points is this closer to?"; finding some equidistant medians between our named points is then no real problem. But if these are not just names, but real distinct discrete types, then the existence of a continuum of individuals lying between them is a much more serious problem; the continuum threatens to collapse into there being as many discrete types as there are individuals, which is an absurd conclusion.

 

3/12/2016 4:11 am  #2


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

This is only a problem if we suppose that each species has a corresponding essence- and the ancients did tend to speak this way -but this needn't be so. I suspect that the typology of life is actually far more complicated and that while there are shared essences they don't really cleanly divide along species lines. Life has forms in the way clay has form which are sculpted by various processes of descent. These are, indeed, real forms, but they are not the naive forms of common classifications.


Fighting to the death "the noonday demon" of Acedia.
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It is precisely “values” that are the powerless and threadbare mask of the objectification of beings, an objectification that has become flat and devoid of background. No one dies for mere values.
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3/12/2016 9:35 pm  #3


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

I strongly recommend David Oderberg's Real Essentialism. ​I don't think you properly capture the realist arguments for essence. The realist argues for essence are meant to account for similarities and identity as a whole. The realist can be wrong about how we understand the essences of life-forms (how to define them) and this doesn't effect his overall argument for realism.

 

3/14/2016 9:15 am  #4


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

It's worth drawing the distinction between properties and kinds (essences) here:

Incessable wrote:

I think, nominalism works much better with modern evolutionary theory than Aristotelian realism (or Platonic realism); dogs and cows are part of a continuum of individual descent, we've assigned names to particular points in this continuum, and when we ask "what is this?" we are really just asking "which of our named points is this closer to?"; finding some equidistant medians between our named points is then no real problem.

Most moderate realists these days are property realists, not kind realists.

Non-trope nominalism about properties never really recovered from Armstrong's attack. Rodriguez-Pereyra wrote a respectable defense of resemblance nominalism, but he ends up needing to adopt David Lewis's extreme modal realism.

Bill McEnaney posted an article on essences and evolution a couple weeks ago.

 

3/14/2016 8:54 pm  #5


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

Incessable wrote:

I think, nominalism works much better with modern evolutionary theory than Aristotelian realism (or Platonic realism); dogs and cows are part of a continuum of individual descent, we've assigned names to particular points in this continuum, and when we ask "what is this?" we are really just asking "which of our named points is this closer to?"; finding some equidistant medians between our named points is then no real problem. But if these are not just names, but real distinct discrete types, then the existence of a continuum of individuals lying between them is a much more serious problem; the continuum threatens to collapse into there being as many discrete types as there are individuals, which is an absurd conclusion.

Let us distinguish between two claims: 

1. Realism: there exist multiply realisable properties e.g. the instance of redness and that instance of redness are instances of the same thing.

2. Essentialism: an entity has some of its characteristics necessarily. 

Neither claim implies the other. Historically Analytical philosophers since the time of Russell have been happy to admit the former without endorsing the latter. Conversely there are Nominalists such William Lane Craig who admit as a matter of common sense that entities have necessary characteristics but think that no matter how similar these characteristics may be they don't point to a universal entity over and above the concrete beings already there. Likewise Realists are not obliged to say that every predicate pertains to a property universal and Essentialists are not obliged to say that every entity has distinct necessary properties.

 There is in fact a prominent group of philosophers, the New Essentialists, who endorse both Realism and Essentialism yet reject Essentialism in biological cases for the reasons you give. Brian Ellis is a prominent representative of this approach. That doesn't mean we must reject all essential properties though - however instance both Dog, Cow and Dogcow necessarily possess the property of not being a prime number, of being at least potentially temporal if they exist and others.

Finally why should the possibility of there being as many discrete types as there are individuals be absurd? Some who normally endorse the above reasoning as a good reason to eschew species essentialism would be happy to grant that if a form of 'perfect cloning' were possible i..e where it possible to replicate an animal’s genetic structure perfectly then that animal would be an instance of the same kind.

For arguments in support for their being finite biological species essences along the traditional Thomist lines I would highly reccomend the work of Oderberg citted above as well as Stephen Boulter's book Metaphysics from a Biological Point of View and his essay 'Can Evolutionary Biology do Without Aristotelian Essentialism?'.
 

Last edited by DanielCC (3/14/2016 9:10 pm)

 

3/14/2016 9:55 pm  #6


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

I find it difficult to reconcile evolution with a denial of essence, because evolution presupposes an essential disinction between living species; otherwise, it would not be meaningful to claim a new species arises.

Speaking of a dogcow is like speaking of a square-circle. The thing is impossible and certainly distinct from either a dog or a cow. Chimeras are conceivable (and imaginable) exactly insofar as they are some part of them like one animal and like another; but the conception and the imagination both presuppose a difference. For example, what is it to say (or imagine) some animal has the leg of a cow and this same leg, at the same time, is the leg of a dog? It cannot be. It is perhaps both conceivable and imaginable that some animal looks like a dog but behaves like a cow or looks like a cow but behaves like a dog; however, it cannot be both at the same time (it cannot look like a dog and a cow at the same time or behave like a dog and cow at the same time).

Of course, what evolution effectively implies is that all living things are only accidentally different. This is ridiculous, however, because (e.g.) vegetative life is not sentient and doesn't have the sentient desires and appetites of an animal. They cannot be merely accidentally distinct beings; otherwise, plants become animals and animals, plants. A dog, then, is not really distinct from a shrub. But who would be so silly as to treat a poisonous snake as they would a trained and domesticated dog?

Last edited by Timocrates (3/14/2016 10:01 pm)


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3/15/2016 4:46 am  #7


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

Timocrates wrote:

I find it difficult to reconcile evolution with a denial of essence, because evolution presupposes an essential disinction between living species; otherwise, it would not be meaningful to claim a new species arises.

On some accounts species can be denied all together and then it is held that all evolution actually does is account in a unified way for the process of differing apperances of life more generally.

Presumably the idea would ammount to something like the account one gives for the arising of a new dog breed: all dog breeds are dogs and a new dog breed is a different way of configuring the inherant potentialities of the species.

Of course, you can't deny essence altogether to give that account, but you need not hold essence at the species level.

Timocrates wrote:

Of course, what evolution effectively implies is that all living things are only accidentally different. This is ridiculous, however, because (e.g.) vegetative life is not sentient and doesn't have the sentient desires and appetites of an animal. They cannot be merely accidentally distinct beings; otherwise, plants become animals and animals, plants. A dog, then, is not really distinct from a shrub. But who would be so silly as to treat a poisonous snake as they would a trained and domesticated dog?

Well, I don't see why one has to outright reject the idea. It's possible that life turn out to be reductively unified on the basis of DNA, for instance: what a dog and a tree are unified with respect to is their genetic nature, which differs only in configuration, such that, were it rearranged, the dog would start to manifest shrub traits until it died because of the systemic destruction this would entail.

You don't have to give up the doctrine of essences to hold that view. It may turn out that it doesn't work as a view, and one would have to tackle the particulars of biology to show this, but it doesn't have particularly interesting metaphysical consequences.


Fighting to the death "the noonday demon" of Acedia.
My Books
It is precisely “values” that are the powerless and threadbare mask of the objectification of beings, an objectification that has become flat and devoid of background. No one dies for mere values.
~Martin Heidegger
 

3/16/2016 11:46 pm  #8


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

Other quite plausible possibilities to retaining the notion that there are natural species of living things:

(1) There are many more biological than natural species. I am fond of Aristotle's three (plants, animals, humans (include Vulcans, dolphins - whatever other rational animals there may be). Or the familiar division of animals into avians, mammals, fish etc.

(2) Detune 'natural' from 'eternal'. Allow that natural species of all kinds can come and go. If Big Band theory is correct, there was a time when even the proton, or gold, did not exist.

(3) Detune 'natural' from 'fixed'. Why can't some natural essences morph one into the other? (That's not a rhetorical question.) Maybe e.g. squirrels are *not* supposed to perfectlty reproduce. They would not be very adaptive, and adaption is important to life on Earth.

(4) Distinguish pre-lapsarian from current Nature. Fallen things don't perfectly reproduce themselves.

(5) Make an epistemic move: it's common in scholastic thought to claim there are essences, but deny we have much access to them except perhaps our own. Ex: think the difference between natural 'roundness' for a planet, and 'sphere'; spheres are a lot like the round things of Nature, but none of them are exactly spheres. I always thought we didn't even know - we didn't strictly have *scientia* - of even humble things like cats. There's an infamous (to me) passage in Metaphys. I.1 where Aristotle as good as notes that science exists, but we don't have it, and can't - then just moves right on as if to say 'but we're gonna do it *anyway*, boys.' Our sciences only approximate their subjects' essential natures.

(6) Allow that Creation still is working itself out; allow that God may not have fixed exactly how it plays out As if it were, er, um, pardon the humble metaphor, but like a Dungeons and Dragons game. The Dungeonmaster only sets certain parameters and adjudicates, brings up encounters with key non-player characters, and occasionally intervenes personally; but the players make all kinds of things happen that are, if not Creative, then sub-creative, or innovative. Perhaps 'eukaryote' was necessary, but 'mammal' was not; or 'mammal' but not 'cow'.

Chris-Kirk

Last edited by Shade Tree Philosopher (3/16/2016 11:49 pm)

 

3/16/2016 11:59 pm  #9


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

iwpoe wrote:

Timocrates wrote:

I find it difficult to reconcile evolution with a denial of essence, because evolution presupposes an essential disinction between living species; otherwise, it would not be meaningful to claim a new species arises.

On some accounts species can be denied all together and then it is held that all evolution actually does is account in a unified way for the process of differing apperances of life more generally.

But that is impossible. There is no evolution without a new species.


"The family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to protection by society and the State."
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 16 (3).

Defend your Family. Join the U.N. Family Rights Caucus.
 

3/17/2016 1:20 am  #10


Re: Is evolution a problem for the Thomistic doctrine of essences?

I don't know about current scientists, Timocrates, but Darwin in his "Origin of Species" saw that categorization not as intrinsic but as arbitrary in the end, and he saw it as an implication of his theory.  He denied the idea of species as something real to organisms.  The idea of species was more as a useful way for us humans to categorize life that is "different enough" in contrast with the different variations of organisms that differ only slightly from each other.  The difference between actual speciation and that of mere variations was a difference of degree and not of type. 
 

 

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