“the Arts And Sciences Are Completely Separate Fields That Should Be Pitted Against Each Other” The

“the arts and sciences are completely separate fields that should be pitted against each other” the overlap of the arts and sciences make up our entire perceivable reality they r fucking on the couch

More Posts from Notestogetbetter and Others

4 months ago
comparison of book thicknesses. First is a think book, possibly a novella, labelled, "idea you start out with." Next is a stack of three very thick volumes, each of which would be larger than a dictionary. This stack is labelled, "shit you need to research, make decisions about, write and then edit out, etc." Last is a book that is thicker than the initial one but is about typical novel size. It's labelled, "story that takes the reader on the journey you want them to take"

memes are fun and relatable and all that, but don't let them discourage you. all of that stuff that doesn't make it into the final product is part of how the final product gets made

3 months ago

i think we've done a great job expanding the view of what a child's favorite animal can be. kids these days can say they love axolotls or pangolins or coelecanths and their decision is respected. maybe their parents can even find them a stuffed animal of it if they know where to look. and i think that's beautiful

3 months ago

For the Reverse Unpopular Opinion meme, Lamarckism!

(This is an excellent ask.)

Lamarck got done a bit dirty by the textbooks, as one so often is. He's billed as the guy who articulated an evolutionary theory of inherited characteristics, inevitably set up as an opponent made of straw for Darwin to knock down. The example I recall my own teachers using in grade school was the idea that a giraffe would strain to reach the highest branches of a tree, and as a result, its offspring would be born with slightly longer necks. Ha-ha-ha, isn't-that-silly, isn't natural selection so much more sensible?

But the thing is, this wasn't his idea, not even close. People have been running with ideas like that since antiquity at least. What Lamarck did was to systematize that claim, in the context of a wider and much more interesting theory.

Lamarck was born in to an era where natural philosophy was slowly giving way to Baconian science in the modern sense- that strange, eighteenth century, the one caught in an uneasy tension between Newton the alchemist and Darwin the naturalist. This is the century of Ben Franklin and his key and his kite, and the awed discovery that this "electricity" business was somehow involved in living organisms- the discovery that paved the way for Shelley's Frankenstein. This was the era when alchemy was fighting its last desperate battles with chemistry, when the division between 'organic' and 'inorganic' chemistry was fundamental- the first synthesis of organic molecules in the laboratory wouldn't occur until 1828, the year before Lamarck's death. We do not have atoms, not yet. Mendel and genetics are still more than a century away; we won't even have cells for another half-century or more.

Lamarck stepped in to that strange moment. I don't think he was a bold revolutionary, really, or had much interest in being one. He was profoundly interested in the structure and relationships between species, and when we're not using him as a punching bag in grade schools, some people manage to remember that he was a banging good taxonomist, and made real progress in the classification of invertebrates. He started life believing in the total immutability of species, but later was convinced that evolution really was occurring- not because somebody taught him in the classroom, or because it was the accepted wisdom of the time, but through deep, continued exposure to nature itself. He was convinced by the evidence of his senses.

(Mostly snails.)

His problem was complexity. When he'd been working as a botanist, he had this neat little idea to order organisms by complexity, starting with the grubbiest, saddest little seaweed or fern, up through lovely flowering plants. This was not an evolutionary theory, just an organizing structure; essentially, just a sort of museum display. But when he was asked to do the same thing with invertebrates, he realized rather quickly that this task had problems. A linear sorting from simple to complex seemed embarrassingly artificial, because it elided too many different kinds of complexity, and ignored obvious similarities and shared characteristics.

When he went back to the drawing board, he found better organizing schema; you'd recognize them today. There were hierarchies, nested identities. Simple forms with only basic, shared anatomical patterns, each functioning as a sort of superset implying more complex groups within it, defined additively by the addition of new organs or structures in the body. He'd made a taxonomic tree.

Even more shockingly, he realized something deep and true in what he was looking at: this wasn't just an abstract mapping of invertebrates to a conceptual diagram of their structures. This was a map in time. Complexities in invertebrates- in all organisms!- must have been accumulating in simpler forms, such that the most complicated organisms were also the youngest.

This is the essential revolution of Lamarckian evolution, not the inherited characteristics thing. His theory, in its full accounting, is actually quite elaborate. Summarized slightly less badly than it is in your grade school classroom (though still pretty badly, I'm by no means an expert on this stuff), it looks something like this:

As we all know, animals and plants are sometimes generated ex nihilo in different places, like maggots spontaneously appearing in middens. However, the spontaneous generation of life is much weaker than we have supposed; it can only result in the most basic, simple organisms (e.g. polyps). All the dizzying complexity we see in the world around us must have happened iteratively, in a sequence over time that operated on inheritance between one organism and its descendants.

As we all know, living things are dynamic in relation to inorganic matter, and this vital power includes an occasional tendency to gain in complexity. However, this tendency is not a spiritual or supernatural effect; it's a function of natural, material processes working over time. Probably this has something to do with fluids such as 'heat' and 'electricity' which are known to concentrate in living tissues. When features appear spontaneously in an organism, that should be understood as an intrinsic propensity of the organism itself, rather than being caused by the environment or by a divine entity. There is a specific, definite, and historically contingent pattern in which new features can appear in existing organisms.

As we all know, using different tissue groups more causes them to be expressed more in your descendants, and disuse weakens them in the same way. However, this is not a major feature in the development of new organic complexity, since it could only move 'laterally' on the complexity ladder and will never create new organs or tissue groups. At most, you might see lineages move from ape-like to human-like or vice versa, or between different types of birds or something; it's an adaptive tendency that helps organisms thrive in different environments. In species will less sophisticated neural systems, this will be even less flexible, because they can't supplement it with willpower the way that complex vertebrates can.

Lamarck isn't messing around here; this is a real, genuinely interesting model of the world. And what I think I'm prepared to argue here is that Lamarck's biggest errors aren't his. He has his own blind spots and mistakes, certainly. The focus on complexity is... fraught, at a minimum. But again and again, what really bites him in the ass is just his failure to break with his inherited assumptions enough. The parts of this that are actually Lamarckian, that is, are the ideas of Lamarck, are very clearly groping towards a recognizable kind of proto-evolutionary theory in a way that we recognize.

What makes Lamarck a punching bag in grade-school classes today is the same thing that made it interesting; it's that it was the best and most scientific explanation of biological complexity available at the time. It was the theory to beat, the one that had edged out all the other competitors and emerged as the most useful framework of the era. And precisely none of that complexity makes it in to our textbooks; they use "Lamarckianism" to refer to arguments made by freaking Aristotle, and which Lamarck himself accepted but de-emphasized as subordinate processes. What's even worse, Darwin didn't reject this mechanism either. Darwin was totally on board with the idea as a possible adaptive tendency; he just didn't particularly need it for his theory.

Lamarck had nothing. Not genetics, not chromosomes, not cells, not atomic theory. Geology was a hot new thing! Heat was a liquid! What Lamarck had was snails. And on the basis of snails, Lamarck deduced a profound theory of complexity emerging over time, of the biosphere as a(n al)chemical process rather than a divine pageant, of gradual adaptation punctuated by rapid innovation. That's incredible.

There's a lot of falsehood in the Lamarckian theory of evolution, and it never managed to entirely throw off the sloppy magical thinking of what came before. But his achievement was to approach biology and taxonomy with a profound scientific curiosity, and to improve and clarify our thinking about those subjects so dramatically that a theory of biology could finally, triumphantly, be proven wrong. Lamarck is falsifiable. That is a victory of the highest order.

4 months ago
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me
Pt 3! Broganes Mean Everything To Me

pt 3! broganes mean everything to me

3 months ago
Part Two Of Creature Au! :DD

Part two of creature au! :DD

part 1/?

3 months ago

Lance: The floor is lava!

Matt: *places Pidge on the table so she/they doesn't have to stop working

Keith: *kicks Lance off the sofa*

Shiro: *lays on the floor*

Hunk: ...Are you okay?

Shiro: No.

  • unabrazofuerte
    unabrazofuerte liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • flightyfox
    flightyfox reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • cardialgic
    cardialgic reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • cardialgic
    cardialgic liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • voidboop
    voidboop reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • lurkiestvoid
    lurkiestvoid reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • lurkiestvoid
    lurkiestvoid reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • lurkiestvoid
    lurkiestvoid reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • lurkiestvoid
    lurkiestvoid liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • pinkished
    pinkished reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • hellohallowedhalo
    hellohallowedhalo liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • lesbian-thesbian
    lesbian-thesbian liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • lemonlimekodkod
    lemonlimekodkod liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • howtofeelreal
    howtofeelreal liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • z3phyru5
    z3phyru5 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • volatilize
    volatilize reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • forestdeity
    forestdeity liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • quinn-of-aebradore
    quinn-of-aebradore reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • quinn-of-aebradore
    quinn-of-aebradore liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • faunafemina
    faunafemina reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • maliksiarmanaz
    maliksiarmanaz reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • gothboyfrnd
    gothboyfrnd reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • gothboyfrnd
    gothboyfrnd liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • actualnymph
    actualnymph reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • saintspringsteen
    saintspringsteen reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • some-dude-i-guess
    some-dude-i-guess reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • bookofillusorylove
    bookofillusorylove liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • conscientiousdust
    conscientiousdust liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • self-esteampunk
    self-esteampunk reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • ghostieking
    ghostieking reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • n-yctophilie
    n-yctophilie liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • aimlessentries
    aimlessentries liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • nutty-megg
    nutty-megg reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • frankiefagogo
    frankiefagogo liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • ulyssessimpsongrant
    ulyssessimpsongrant reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • xaoca
    xaoca reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • 825
    825 liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • sorrythatwasmean
    sorrythatwasmean reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • athos-silvani
    athos-silvani reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • jaegerprom
    jaegerprom liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • deastrumquodvicis
    deastrumquodvicis reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • desertpancake
    desertpancake reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • desertpancake
    desertpancake liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • heyyourgoldfishsucks
    heyyourgoldfishsucks reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • magenta-universe
    magenta-universe liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • kirionabrainrot
    kirionabrainrot reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • ladybarbarian
    ladybarbarian liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • mmaaattttt
    mmaaattttt liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • kaijuvsgiantrobotsvsme
    kaijuvsgiantrobotsvsme reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • mamafriesmeal
    mamafriesmeal reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
notestogetbetter - Untitled
Untitled

112 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags