Abstract
Accounts of the evolutionary past have as much in common with works of narrative history as they do with works of science. Awareness of the narrative character of evolutionary writing leads to the discovery of a host of fascinating and hitherto unrecognized problems in the representation of evolutionary history, problems associated with the writing of narrative. These problems include selective attention, narrative perspective, foregrounding and backgrounding, differential resolution, and the establishment of a canon of important events. The narrative aspects of evolutionary writing, however, which promote linearity and cohesiveness in conventional stories, conflict with the underlying chronicle of evolution, which is not linear, but branched, and which does not cohere, but diverges. The impulse to narrate is so great, however, and is so strongly reinforced by traditional schemes of taxonomic attention, that natural historians have more often abandoned the diverging tree than they have abandoned the narrative mode of representation. If we are to understand the true nature of the evolutionary past then we must adopt “tree thinking”, and develop new and creative ways, both narrative and non-narrative, of telling the history of life.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
American Ornithologists' Union: 1983, Check-list of North American Birds, sixth edition, American Ornithologists' Union.
Atran, S.: 1990, Cognitive Foundations of Natural History: Towards an Anthropology of Science, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Bailyn, B.: 1967, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
Barrett, P. H.: 1960, ‘A Transcription of Darwin's First Notebook on “Transmutation of Species”’, Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 122, 247–296.
Bonnet, C.: 1745, Traité d'Insectologie, Premier Parte, Durand, Paris.
Borges, J. L.: 1964, ‘The Garden of Forking Paths’, in Labyrinths: Selected Stories and Other Writings, New Directions, New York, pp. 19–29.
Buckland, F.: 1874, Curiosities of Natural History, Richard Bentley and Son, London.
Butterfield, H.: 1931, The Whig Interpretation of History, George Bell & Sons, London.
Carroll, R. L.: 1988, vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York.
Danto, A. C.: 1985, Narration and Knowledge, Columbia University Press, New York.
Downs, R. M., and D. Stea: 1977, Maps in Minds: Reflections on Cognitive Mapping, Harper & Row, New York.
Dray, W.: 1989, On History and Philosophers of History, E. J. Brill, Leiden.
Durrell, L.: 1957, Justine, E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., New York.
Durrell, L.: 1958, Balthazar, E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., New York.
Durrell, L.: 1959, Mountolive, E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., New York.
Fernholm, B., K. Bremer, L. Brundin, H. Jörnvall, L. Rutberg, and H.-E. Wanntorp (organizing committee): 1989, The Hierarchy of Life: Molecules and Morphology in Phylogenetic Analysis, Proceedings from Nobel Symposium 70, Excerpta Medica, Amsterdam, New York, and Oxford.
Feyerabend, P. K.: 1988, Against Method, revised edition, Verso, London.
Gallie, W. B.: 1964, Philosophy and the Historical Understanding, Schocken Books, New York.
Gardner, J.: 1971, Grendel, Knopf, New York.
Gauthier, J., D. Cannatella, K. de Queeiroz, A. G. Kluge, and T. Rowe: 1989, ‘Tetrapod Phylogeny’, in B. Fernholm et al. (eds.), The Hierarchy of Life, Excerpta Medica, Amsterdam, pp. 337–353.
Gonick, L.: 1990, The Cartoon History of the Universe, Doubleday, New York.
Gould, P., and R. White: 1986, Mental Maps, second edition, Allen & Unwin, Boston.
Gould, S. J.: 1987, Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
Gould, S. J.: 1989, Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History, W. W. Norton & Company, New York.
Greene, J. C.: 1961, The Death of Adam, Mentor Books, New York.
Haynes, R. M.: 1980, Geographical Images and Mental Maps, Macmillan Education Ltd., Houndmills.
Hull, D. L.: 1988, Science as a Process, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Landau, M.: 1991, Narratives of Human Evolution, Yale University Press, New Haven.
Larson, G.: 1989, The Prehistory of the Far Side: A 10th Anniversary Exhibit, Andrews and McMeel, Kansas City.
Lewin, R.: 1982, Thread of Life: The Smithsonian Looks at Evolution, Smithsonian Books, Washington, D. C.
Lovejoy, A. O.: 1936, The Great Chain of Being, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
Mallory, J. P.: 1989, In Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archeology and Myth, Thames and Hudson, London.
Mayr, E., and J. C. Greenway, Jr.: 1956, ‘Sequence of Passerine Families (Aves)’, Breviora 58.
Mink, L. O.: 1987, Historical Understanding, Cornell University Press, Ithaca.
Nagel, E.: 1959, ‘The Logic of Historical Analysis’, in H. Meyerhoff (ed.), The Philosophy of History in Our Time, Doubleday, Garden City, pp. 203–215.
National Geographic Society: 1990, National Geographic Atlas of the World, sixth edition, National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.
Nitecki, M. H. (ed.): 1988, Evolutionary Progress, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
O'Hara, R. J.: 1988a, ‘Homage to Clio, or, Toward an Historical Philosophy for Evolutionary Biology’, Systematic Zoology 37, 142–155.
O'Hara, R. J.: 1988b, ‘Diagrammatic Classifications of Birds, 1819–1901: Views of the Natural System in 19th-Century British Ornithology’, in H. Ouellet (ed.), Acta XIX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici, National Museum of Natural Sciences, Ottawa, pp. 2746–2759.
O'Hara, R. J.: 1991, ‘Representations of the Natural System in the Nineteenth Century’, Biology and Philosophy 6, 255–274.
Patterson, D. J.: 1988, ‘The Evolution of Protozoa’, Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Supplemento I 83, 580–600.
de Queiroz, K.: 1988, ‘Systematics and the Darwin ian Revolution’, Philosophy of Science 55, 238–259.
Raikow, R. J.: 1986, ‘Why Are There so Many Kinds of Passerine Birds’, Systematic Zoology 35, 255–259.
Raikow, R. J.: 1988, ‘The Analysis of Evolutionary Success’, Systematic Zoology 37, 76–79.
Reader, J.: 1986, The Rise of Life: The First 3.5 Billion Years, Knopf, New York.
Richards, R. J.: 1987, Darwin and the Emergence of Evolutionary Theories of Mind and Behavior, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Romer, A. S.: 1959, The Vertebrate Story, fourth edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Rouse, J.: 1990, ‘The Narrative Reconstruction of Science’, Inquiry 33, 179–196.
Savage, H. M.: 1983, ‘The Shape of Evolution: Systematic Tree Topology’, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 20, 225–244.
Scholes, R., and R. Kellogg: 1966, The Nature of Narrative, Oxford University Press, New York.
Shao, K.-T., and R. R. Sokal: 1990, ‘Tree Balance’, Systematic Zoology 39, 266–276.
Sloan, P. R.: 1987, ‘From Logical Universals to Historical Individuals: Buffon's Idea of Biological Species’, in Histoire du Concept d'Espèce dans les Sciences de la Vie, Fondation Singer-Polignac, Paris, pp. 101–140.
Stevens, P. F.: 1990, ‘Nomenclatura Stability, Taxonomic Instinct, and Flora Writing — a Recipe for Disaster?’, in P. Baas et al. (eds.), The Plant Diversity of Malesia, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, pp. 387–410.
Toulmin, S.: 1982, The Return to Cosmology: Postmodern Science and the Theology of Nature, University of California Press, Berkeley.
Toulmin, S.: 1988, ‘The Recovery of Practical Philosophy’, American Scholar 57, 337–352.
Toulmin, S.: 1990, Cosmopolis: The Hidden Agenda of Modernity, The Free Press, New York.
Toulmin, S., and J. Goodfield: 1965, The Discovery of Time, Harper & Row, New York.
White, H.: 1973, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
White, H.: 1987, The Content of the Form, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
White, M.: 1965, Foundations of Historical Knowledge, Harper & Row, New York.
Wiley, E. O.: 1980, ‘Is the Evolutionary Species Concept Fiction? — A Consideration of Classes, Individuals and Historical Entities’, Systematic Zoology 29, 76–80.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
O'Hara, R.J. Telling the tree: Narrative representation and the study of evolutionary history. Biol Philos 7, 135–160 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00129880
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00129880