The theory of evolution explains the origin of biological diversity and levels of similarity between species. A characteristic of emergence is that many iterations of a simple law (natural selection of the fittest to reproduce) can produce novel, diverse and rich structures. In biological evolution many generations in a population can produce new traits and species.
Many of the most debated issues about evolution relate to the different characteristics of emergence and are briefly discussed below.
Scales
Central to emergence are the ideas of “many” and of scales. The former can take two forms: a system composed of many interacting components, or a system that undergoes many iterations according to a rule that is repeated many times. For evolution, both forms of “many” are relevant and have several dimensions. Evolution occurs in a population, i.e., a community of many members of a species living in a specific environment. Each member of the population has a specific genotype (many genes), which largely determines biological characteristics, from proteins to organs, defined as the phenotype. The environment also consists of many interacting species. Natural selection can act at multiple levels: on genes, cells, organisms, species, and groups of species.
Microscopic and macroscopic scales can also manifest in different ways. In terms of length, the micro- and macro- scales can be defined in terms of genotypes and phenotypes, respectively. In terms of time, microevolution and macroevolution roughly correspond to directly observable timescales and geological timescales, respectively. They are associated with the emergence of new traits within a species and new species, respectively.
Novelty
Development of new traits and species occurs over many generations, due to the repetition of the rule of natural selection.
Evolution theory uses concepts such as natural selection, survival of the fittest, niches, and hierarchical trees, that are not present in chemistry and physics.
Connecting micro- and macro- properties
As for other systems, this is one of the great challenges of emergence. Genotypes and phenotypes are extremely well characterised. Genotype-phenotype maps seek to connect these micro- and macro- levels. A detailed understanding of how microevolution leads to macroevolution is a challenge.
Discontinuities
In microevolution, new traits occur within a species due to (continuous) adaptation to the environment. In contrast, in macroevolution, new organs and species can occur suddenly (at least on geological timescales). An example is the Cambrian explosion of new life forms. Extinctions can also represent discontinuities.
Evolution of a population occurs in response to changes in an environment. New traits, new species, and extinctions can be viewed as qualitative changes due to quantitative changes. For example, small changes in the oxygen concentration in the atmosphere is one (among many) hypotheses for the cause of the Cambrian explosion.
Using techniques from statistical physics, the transition of a species from survival to extinction can be viewed as a non-equilibrium phase transition to an absorbing state. The order parameter is the population and a toy model is directed population.1
Diversity with limitations
All species are based on the same biochemistry of DNA and proteins. Yet from these same building blocks there is an incredible diversity: more than 8 million distinct species, including more than 10,000 species of birds and more than 15,000 species of ants. Darwin said nature produces “endless forms most beautiful.”
But there are limitations. For example, the number of species with more than one head, brain, heart, or liver is limited. There are many more genotypes than phenotypes.
The dominant view is that evolution is driven by random genetic mutations. Debates have arisen about how much evolution is limited (constrained) by morphology and environment.
Ball stated: (p. 332)
“convergent evolution is often regarded as a sign that certain shapes or structures are ideal adaptations to particular environments for physical reasons: wings consisting of flat, thin membranes are best for flying, torpedo-shaped bodies a streamlined for efficient swimming, and so on… There is a tendency in evolutionary biology to regard natural selection as a process with an infinite palette: anything is possible so long as it doesn't break the laws of physics. But the laws of physics might impose more constraint than that, precisely because biology uses rather than merely suffers them.”
Universality
Not all mutations produce a change in phenotype. There are neutral mutations. There are many more genotypes than phenotypes. In other words, genotype-phenotype maps are many-to-one.
Species that are unrelated or distantly related (in the tree of life) sometimes have traits or behaviours that are similar. Convergent evolution is the hypothesis that natural selection produced the same outcome in a different context.
Modularity at the mesoscale
The economist Simon pointed out that evolution can occur on much faster time scales than might be expected because of modularity. According to Clune et al.
“A long-standing, open question in biology is how populations are capable of rapidly adapting to novel environments, a trait called evolvability [1]. A major contributor to evolvability is the fact that many biological entities are modular, especially the many biological processes and structures that can be modelled as networks, such as metabolic pathways, gene regulation, protein interactions and animal brains [1–7].”
Ball highlighted how domains in proteins provide functional modules that evolution uses: (pp. 174-5)
“the evolution of metazoan proteins is not so much a slow affair of letting random genetic mutations change one amino acid for another and seeing what effect it produces. Rather, it constitutes a reshuffling of already functional modules to produce multidomain molecules with new potential - a strategy much more likely to yield successful results… the “unit” of molecular evolution here is not really the base pair of DNA or the amino acid or protein, or the gene itself, by the peers at a scale intermediate between the two: the module of a domain. It seems that this shuffling, rather than the slow mutation of primary base sequences, is what has driven the evolution of animals.”
Johnston et al. considered an algorithmic picture of evolution that
“suggests that symmetric structures preferentially arise not just due to natural selection but also because they require less specific information to encode and are therefore much more likely to appear as phenotypic variation through random mutations… many genotype–phenotype maps are exponentially biased toward phenotypes with low descriptional complexity. A preference for symmetry is a special case of this bias… Lower descriptional complexity also correlates with higher mutational robustness, which may aid the evolution of complex modular assemblies of multiple components.”
Self-organisation
Complex biological structures, from proteins to organisms, have formed spontaneously due to evolution over millions of years. Their intricacy and functionality have led to claims of purpose and design. However, this is argued to be an “apparent” design, just like an economy whose self-organisation appears “as if” it is guided by an “invisible hand.”
Kauffman claimed that self-organisation is as important as natural selection in driving evolution.
Unpredictability
A contested question about evolution is the role of contingency (historical accidents) and whether the evolution of complex life forms, particularly humans, was an accident of history or inevitable.
Irreducibility
Until recently, evolutionary biology has been dominated by a reductionist gene-centric view, popularised by Dawkins. However, recent discussions about systems biology, evo-devo, and epigenetics have questioned this view. Some characterise these alternative views as a form of structuralism.
Complexity
An algorithmic picture of evolution suggests that simplicity spontaneously emerges as many genotype-phenotype maps may be biased towards phenotypes with low descriptional complexity.
Toy models
An earlier post discussed the key role that toy models, such as “bean bag” genetics, have played in evolutionary theory.
Cross-fertilisation of fields
Ideas from evolution have stimulated the development of genetic algorithms in computer science.
Drossel has reviewed connections between evolution and statistical physics, including a wide range of toy models. Examples include spin glass models that give rise to rugged landscapes for fitness and can describe hierarchical structures, comparable to Darwin’s tree of life. Goldenfeld and Woese argued that evolution can be viewed as a collective phenomenon far from equilibrium. The toy model central to their discussion is directed percolation.












