The book arose from a lecture series the authors delivered for the Organization of American States program on Biological and Cultural Foundations of Knowledge. Maturana and Varela produced the material together, drawing on nearly two decades of their collaborative work since the original 1973 formulation of autopoiesis. The English translation by Robert Paolucci was supervised by Maturana and Varela and became the standard reference text in English.
The book's argument proceeds by levels. Part I establishes the biological definition of life as autopoiesis. Part II examines how organisms evolve through structural coupling with environments that include other organisms. Part III analyzes how nervous systems emerge as closed operational networks generating the organism's behavior. Part IV examines social phenomena as third-order structural coupling. Part V culminates in the analysis of human languaging and the ethical implications of recognizing other beings as legitimate others in coexistence.
The book has become one of the most influential works in systems theory, complexity science, enactive cognitive science, and constructivist approaches to education and therapy. Its accessibility — aided by deliberate use of metaphor and illustration — has made it the primary entry point for most readers encountering Maturana and Varela's framework.
For the contemporary AI debate, 'The Tree of Knowledge' remains the most comprehensive source for understanding why Maturana's framework produces sharp conclusions about what AI is and is not. The recursive integration of biology, cognition, and language means that questions about large language models — whether they know, whether they understand, whether they language — receive answers grounded in a biology that allopoietic systems cannot satisfy.
The Spanish original ('El Árbol del Conocimiento: Las Bases Biológicas del Entendimiento Humano') was published in 1984 by Editorial Universitaria in Santiago. The English translation followed in 1987 from Shambhala Publications (later New Science Library). A second, revised English edition was published in 1992 with a foreword by J.Z. Young.
Varela's involvement was essential. While Maturana had developed autopoiesis and structural coupling primarily through his own theoretical work, Varela brought training in systems theory, computer science, and Buddhist philosophy that enriched the framework's presentation. The partnership, which had begun in the late 1960s when Varela was Maturana's student, produced its fullest collaborative expression in this book.
Recursive integration. The book's distinctive achievement is showing how the same organizational pattern — self-production through structural change — operates at every level from cell to civilization.
The Tree metaphor. The tree as organizing image: roots in biology, trunk in cognition, branches in language and ethics — all sharing the same organizational logic.
Natural drift, not adaptation. Evolution is reframed as structural drift rather than adaptation to external challenges. Species do not adapt to environments; they drift in coupling with environments.
Ethics as biological outcome. The book's final chapter develops the ethical implication of the framework: recognizing other beings as legitimate others in coexistence is not an additional moral principle imposed on biology but the biological condition for human social living.
The book has been criticized for overreaching — attempting to derive ethics from biology in ways that some readers find unconvincing. Defenders argue that the framework does not derive specific moral content from biology but shows the biological ground from which ethical relations become possible. The book's accessibility has also been criticized as sometimes coming at the cost of precision; more technical treatments remain available in 'Autopoiesis and Cognition' and Maturana's later papers.