| Focus 1/3 | Massive extinctions in geological time

Georges Cuvier

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georges cuvier
Figure 1. Portrait of Georges Cuvier by James Thomson (1789-1850). [Source: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons].
The image left by Georges Cuvier (1769 – 1832) in the opinion of current biologists is complex. Cuvier remains admired, as he was in his lifetime, for having been one of the best anatomists of his time, one of the founders of comparative anatomy and a major contributor to the reputation and development of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle de Paris. But it was also denigrated, both scientifically and morally. First of all, a scientist, for having fiercely fought the ideas of two of his colleagues, his former friend Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1772 – 1844) and Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744 – 1829).

Both had proposed bold hypotheses about the relationships between different groups of living organisms, hypotheses that contributed more or less directly to the emergence of the theory of evolution:

  • Cuvier had established, on the basis of their anatomy, four large groups of animals, four completely distinct and original organizations, without possible relationships between them: Radiated (sponges, corals, echinoderms…), Molluscs, Articulated (arthropods) and Vertebrates.
  • Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, on the other hand, considered correspondences, “analogies”, between the structures of these distinct “organizational plans”, going so far as to consider the anatomy of a lobster as an “upside down” equivalent of that of a vertebrate (external skeleton against internal skeleton, ventral nerve chain against dorsal, dorsal circulation system instead of ventral…).

The “quarrel of the analogues” that opposed Cuvier and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in 1830 captivated both naturalist scientists like Goethe, from Prussia, and socialites like Balzac, in Paris [1].

With the success of Darwin’s theory of evolution, historiography has mainly retained the confrontation of Cuvier and Lamarck, author in 1809 of an evolutionary theory according to which organisms could transform from one generation to the next:

  • by “the heredity of the acquired traits”: the physical characteristics acquired by the parents during their lifetime – their muscles, for example – would be transmitted directly to their offspring;
  • and by “the use and non-use of a character”: a structure would tend to disappear when it is not, or no longer, “useful” to the organism; it would develop, on the contrary, if it had a direct benefit for the individual [2]).

Cuvier is accused of not only stifling Lamarck’s innovative theory, but also of not hesitating to ridicule his opponent again when he delivered his eulogy in 1829.

Cuvier’s moral criticism, more than scientific, is also based on the character’s social trajectory: a young native of Montbéliard of modest origin, Cuvier ended up being knighted by Charles X in 1819, after an uninterrupted social rise despite the political, economic and social upheavals that marked the Revolution, the Napoleonic Empire and the Restoration. Cuvier was therefore caricatured in the 20th century as the typical representative of reactionary positions (social conservatism of the 20th century bourgeoisie and scientific conservatism with Catholic bigotry), as opposed to Lamarck (the visionary who would have been right too early) and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (the bold iconoclast and probably agnostic).

megatherium
Figure 2. The Megatherium, an example of an extinct animal described by Cuvier in his Discourse on Global Revolutions. [Source: Photo: © C. Langlois]
The history and history of science today paint a more nuanced picture of Cuvier, who died of cholera in 1832 at the age of 62. Scientifically, Cuvier’s ideas were firmly based on rigorous anatomical observations, while Geoffroy’s and Lamarck’s dared to make risky conjectures in the hope of explaining animal diversity with a single general theory. It was his anatomical skills rather than his religious fervour that led Cuvier to refuse the transformation of species advanced by Lamarck: Cuvier stressed that the anatomy of animals was closely linked to their way of life and ensured their survival. It was therefore not possible, according to him, to consider “intermediate” organisms between two groups, or to modify a single characteristic independently of the whole organism, since these beings could not “function” correctly [3]. The four categories of animals defined by Cuvier among the animals, and within each of them the species in relation to each other, could therefore only be watertight boxes.

At the same time, Cuvier’s anatomical expertise had enabled him to demonstrate that some fossil skeletons did not correspond to any living animal (Figure 2). Explaining their past existence while refusing transformationism led Cuvier to consider “revolutions of the Globe”, each revolution making the previous fauna disappear before another one emerged and developed. The current notion of crisis is a reinterpretation of this “catastrophist” vision, now compatible with the theory of evolution, since no crisis has ever been able to eradicate all living species.

 


References and notes

Cover image. Portrait of Georges Cuvier by James Thomson (1789-1850) [Source: [public domain], via Wikimedia Commons]

[1] Hervé Le Guyader (2017) Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. Un naturaliste visionnaire. Belin, coll. Alpha, 448 p. – ISBN: 978-2-4100-0609-4. For a review of the book, see C. Langlois (2017), on the Planet-Terre website.(in french)

[2] It should be noted that this idea, although mistaken, is still firmly rooted in the general public’s conception of the evolution of species!

[3] This argument of the impossibility of “intermediate” organizations is still used by anti-evolutionist movements. However, if the argument was relevant against Lamarck’s theory, it is not valid against Darwinian evolution, which is based on populations of individuals slightly different from each other.