2. From the Chain of Being to the Tree of Life.
As should be clear from the foregoing, the frequent
references
to the concatenation of creatures in
eighteenth-century science (with,
perhaps, an excep-
tion for Robinet) appeal
rather to the principle of
continuity than to that of plenitude. Now
although
continuity is an idea implicit in that of plenitude, the
converse is not true. That nature makes no jumps—and
no scientist in the second half of the eighteenth century
appeared to doubt
it—does not in fact mean that
nature realizes all those
possibilities implicit from all
eternity in the act of creation. The
world's continuity,
in other words, is due to the action of laws and
forces
and not to a necessity inherent in the divine nature.
And with
that the very foundation of the principle of
plenitude, namely, its
connection with the principle of
sufficient reason stressed by Leibniz, is
broken down.
Typical in this sense is, once again, Buffon's position,
when he places the
principle of sufficient reason
among moral entities (êtres moraux), created by man
on the basis of
arbitrary relations which can produce
“rien... de physique et de réel,” and can
never be-
come a “physical
reason” for things. It is therefore
illegitimate to ask
ourselves the “why” of nature (His-
toire des animaux, Ch. V).
Science no sooner rejects
the principle of sufficient reason than it does
the prin-
ciple of plenitude, that is, the
very foundation of the
Chain of Being. The principle of continuity which,
as
we have seen, survives the process of temporalization,
is by itself
not enough to guarantee the survival of the
Chain of Being. And the best
epitaph, at the conclusion
of this sketch, might be one from the same Buffon:
le vivant et l'animé, au lieu d'être un
degré méta-
physique
des êtres, est une propriété physique de la
matière (“Animated life, instead of being a
metaphysi-
cal grade of being, is only
a physical property of mat-
ter,”
ibid., Ch. I).
The succession of living forms appears explainable
now on the basis of the
working of physical laws or
of an activity inherent in nature: nature, as
La Mettrie
says, is “neither Chance, nor God”
(ni Hasard, ni Dieu).
The certainty of
this descending process, from God to
the natural world, fails; and with
that is lost too the
presumption that science can reconstruct the plan
of
creation in all its fullness by working its way back per
vestigias.
Now we may say that the divorce between the two
ideas, that of continuity
and that of plenitude, is com-
plete, even
though they appear associated once more
in romantic philosophy: in
Schiller's dialectic of
Formtrieb and Stofftrieb; in
Fichte's conception of the
Ego as infinite activity; in the philosophy of
nature
of Schelling; in the ethico-political ideal of the reach-
ing of moral perfection through an
indefinite progress;
and in the conception of aesthetic progress as
infinite
productivity.
In science, the metaphor of the Chain of Being was
to continue to circulate
long after its “crisis”; the
English paleontologist
James Parkinson, still in the
second decade of the nineteenth century, saw
in it an
obstacle to the correct interpretation of the data of
the new science (Greene [1959], p. 122). But in general,
in
nineteenth-century science, another metaphor gains
currency, one that keeps
the quality of continuity but
not of plentitude. It is the tree of
evolution, published
by Lamarck in the
Philosophie
zoologique ([1809]; re-
produced in Greene, p. 163), which represents a series
branching off
in an irregularly spaced but uninter-
rupted way. It is what Darwin calls the “Tree of
Life”
(
Origin of Species [1859], Ch. IV).
The affinities of all beings... have sometimes been repre-
sented by a great tree. I think this simile largely
speaks
the truth. The green and budding twigs may represent
existing species; and those produced during former years
may represent
the long succession of extinct species. At each
period of growth all
the growing twigs tried to branch out
on all sides, and to overtop and
kill the surrounding twigs
and branches, in the same manner as species
and groups
have at all times mastered other species in the great
battle
for life.... As buds give rise by growth to fresh buds, and
these, if vigorous, branch out and overtop on all sides many
a feebler
branch, so by generation I believe it has been
with the great Tree of
Life, which fills with its dead and
broken branches the crust of the
earth, and covers the
surface with its ever-branching and beautiful
ramifications.