Overview
All versions of developmental systems theory espouse the view that:
- All biological processes (including both evolution and development) operate by continually assembling new structures.
- Each such structure transcends the structures from which it arose and has its own systematic characteristics, information, functions and laws.
- Conversely, each such structure is ultimately irreducible to any lower (or higher) level of structure, and can be described and explained only on its own terms.
- Furthermore, the major processes through which life as a whole operates, including evolution, heredity and the development of particular organisms, can only be accounted for by incorporating many more layers of structure and process than the conventional concepts of ‘gene’ and ‘environment’ normally allow for.
In other words, although it does not claim that all structures are
equal, development systems theory is fundamentally opposed to reductionism of all kinds. In short, developmental systems theory intends to formulate a perspective which does not presume the causal (or ontological) priority of any particular entity and thereby maintains an explanatory openness on all empirical fronts.
For example, there is vigorous resistance to the widespread assumptions
that one can legitimately speak of genes ‘for’ specific phenotypic
characters or that adaptation consists of evolution ‘shaping’ the more
or less passive species, as opposed to adaptation consisting of
organisms actively selecting, defining, shaping and often creating their
niches.
Developmental systems theory: Topics
Six Themes of DST
1. Joint Determination by Multiple Causes
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- Development is a product of multiple interacting sources.
2. Context Sensitivity and Contingency
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- Development depends on the current state of the organism.
3. Extended Inheritance
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- An organism inherits resources from the environment in addition to genes.
4. Development as a process of construction
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- The organism helps shape its own environment, such as the way a beaver builds a dam to raise the water level to build a lodge.
5. Distributed Control
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- Idea that no single source of influence has central control over an organism's development.
6. Evolution As Construction
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- The evolution of an entire developmental system, including whole ecosystems of which given organisms are parts, not just the changes of a particular being or population.
A computing metaphor
To
adopt a computing metaphor, the reductionists whom developmental
systems theory opposes assume that causal factors can be divided into
‘processes’ and ‘data’, as in the Harvard computer architecture.
Data (inputs, resources, content, and so on) is required by all
processes, and must often fall within certain limits if the process in
question is to have its ‘normal’ outcome. However, the data alone is
helpless to create this outcome, while the process may be ‘satisfied’
with a considerable range of alternative data. Developmental systems
theory, by contrast, assumes that the process/data distinction is at
best misleading and at worst completely false, and that while it may be
helpful for very specific pragmatic or theoretical reasons to treat a
structure now as a process and now as a datum, there is always a risk
(to which reductionists routinely succumb) that this methodological
convenience will be promoted into an ontological conclusion.
In fact, for the proponents of DST, either all structures are both
process and data, depending on context, or even more radically, no
structure is either.
Fundamental asymmetry
For
reductionists there is a fundamental asymmetry between different causal
factors, whereas for DST such asymmetries can only be justified by
specific purposes, and argue that many of the (generally unspoken)
purposes to which such (generally exaggerated) asymmetries have been put
are scientifically illegitimate. Thus, for developmental systems
theory, many of the most widely applied, asymmetric and entirely
legitimate distinctions biologists draw (between, say, genetic factors
that create potential and environmental factors that select outcomes or
genetic factors of determination and environmental factors of
realization) obtain their legitimacy from the conceptual clarity and
specificity with which they are applied, not from their having tapped a
profound and irreducible ontological truth about biological causation.
One problem might be solved by reversing the direction of causation
correctly identified in another. This parity of treatment is especially
important when comparing the evolutionary and developmental explanations
for one and the same character of an organism.
DST approach
One
upshot of this approach is that developmental systems theory also
argues that what is inherited from generation to generation is a good
deal more than simply genes (or even the other items, such as the
fertilized zygote, that are also sometimes conceded). As a result, much
of the conceptual framework that justifies ‘selfish gene’
models is regarded by developmental systems theory as not merely weak
but actually false. Not only are major elements of the environment built
and inherited as materially as any gene but active modifications to the
environment by the organism (for example, a termite mound or a beaver’s
dam) demonstrably become major environmental factors to which future
adaptation is addressed. Thus, once termites have begun to build their
monumental nests, it is the demands of living in those very nests to
which future generations of termite must adapt.
This inheritance may take many forms and operate on many scales,
with a multiplicity of systems of inheritance complementing the genes.
From position and maternal effects on gene expression to epigenetic
inheritance to the active construction and intergenerational transmission of enduring niches,
development systems theory argues that not only inheritance but
evolution as a whole can be understood only by taking into account a far
wider range of ‘reproducers’ or ‘inheritance systems’ – genetic,
epigenetic, behavioral and symbolic – than neo-Darwinism’s ‘atomic’ genes and gene-like ‘replicators’.
DST regards every level of biological structure as susceptible to
influence from all the structures by which they are surrounded, be it
from above, below, or any other direction – a proposition that throws
into question some of (popular and professional) biology’s most central
and celebrated claims, not least the ‘central dogma’ of Mendelian
genetics, any direct determination of phenotype by genotype, and the
very notion that any aspect of biological (or psychological, or any
other higher form) activity or experience is capable of direct or
exhaustive genetic or evolutionary ‘explanation’.
Developmental systems theory is plainly radically incompatible
with both neo-Darwinism and information processing theory. Whereas
neo-Darwinism defines evolution in terms of changes in gene
distribution, the possibility that an evolutionarily significant change
may arise and be sustained without any directly corresponding change in
gene frequencies is an elementary assumption of developmental systems
theory, just as neo-Darwinism’s ‘explanation’ of phenomena in terms of
reproductive fitness is regarded as fundamentally shallow. Even the
widespread mechanistic equation of ‘gene’ with a specific DNA sequence
has been thrown into question, as have the analogous interpretations of evolution and adaptation.
Likewise, the wholly generic, functional and anti-developmental
models offered by information processing theory are comprehensively
challenged by DST’s evidence that nothing is explained without an
explicit structural and developmental analysis on the appropriate
levels. As a result, what qualifies as ‘information’ depends wholly on
the content and context out of which that information arises, within
which it is translated and to which it is applied.
Related theories
Developmental
systems theory is by no means a narrowly defined collection of ideas,
and the boundaries with neighboring models are very porous. Notable
related ideas (with key texts) include:
- Baldwinian selection, or the Baldwin effect
- Dialectical biology
- Evolutionary developmental biology
- General systems theory
- Neural Darwinism
- Probabilistic epigenesis
- Relational developmental systems