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Ernst Mayr

The evolutionary biologist who formalized the distinction between how and why—proximate and ultimate causes—and who spent a century insisting that biology is irreducible to physics, a claim that proves equally true of intelligence.
Ernst Mayr is the philosopher hidden inside the biologist. He earned his reputation through fieldwork in New Guinea, through systematics, through his central role in the Modern Synthesis that unified Darwinian selection with Mendelian genetics—and then he spent the last half of a century-long career arguing that all of biology had been thinking about causation wrong. His 1961 paper “Cause and Effect in Biology” drew a distinction that seems obvious once stated and is violated constantly in practice: every biological phenomenon requires two kinds of explanation, the proximate (how does this work?) and the ultimate (why did it evolve?), and confusing the two produces a century of category errors. That distinction arrives in 2026 with undiminished force because the AI discourse is built on exactly the confusion Mayr diagnosed. When someone asks whether large language models understand—when they observe that the system produces outputs consistent with understanding and conclude the understanding is real—they are committing the error of treating a proximate observation as evidence for an ultimate equivalence. Mayr also gave biology its most important conceptual revolution since Darwin: the shift from typological thinking to population thinking, the recognition that the type is a statistical abstraction and the individual is the biological reality. Applied to the AI transition, this transformation is urgent: the discourse is consumed by types—the triumphant builder, the displaced expert, the ambivalent silent middle—while the distribution of actual human responses to AI, which is what matters for policy and for understanding, goes almost entirely unstudied. And Mayr's insistence on the autonomy of biology—that biological systems have histories that physics cannot derive, and that historical explanation is irreducible to mechanism—establishes precisely why AI systems, as historical entities shaped by their training data the way species are shaped by their evolutionary environment, require a new kind of explanation that neither physics nor software engineering can supply.
Ernst Mayr
Ernst Mayr

In the [YOU] on AI Field Guide

[YOU] on AI asks what the AI transition means for the person living through it. Mayr's framework answers with a diagnostic: the confusion that makes the transition so disorienting is precisely the confusion of proximate and ultimate causes. When a developer says Claude “understands” a problem, she is making a proximate observation—the system produces outputs consistent with understanding. The ultimate explanation of those outputs, grounded in a training process that selected for plausible text rather than verified understanding, is entirely different. The proximate behavior and the ultimate cause are not in conflict; they are different questions, and the illusion that they share an answer is the conceptual engine of both the triumphalism and the terror that the cycle tries to move past.

Mayr's population thinking recasts the most enduring debate in the cycle. The discourse constructs types: the triumphalist who achieved twenty-fold productivity, the elegist whose expertise has been commoditized, the ambivalent middle who holds both truths without resolving them. These types are vivid and real as data points; they are misleading as generalizations. Population thinking asks instead about the distribution: What is the variance of responses to AI across all the people affected by it? What conditions produce different outcomes within the same population? The Berkeley study Segal discusses documented intensification and burnout; its own data also showed significant variation in how different workers responded to the same tools. Population thinking insists on attending to that variation, because the variation is the reality and the types are the abstractions.

The concept of the autonomy of biology—that biological entities have properties grounded in history that physics cannot derive—generates a parallel claim about AI: that AI systems are historical entities, shaped by their training data the way species are shaped by their evolutionary environment, and that the generalizations drawn from one system should be held with the same caution a biologist holds generalizations drawn from one population of one species. The specific character of Segal's collaboration with Claude in Chapter 7 of The Orange Pill—the insights that emerged, the confident wrongness, the passage that attributed a concept to Deleuze that had almost nothing to do with Deleuze's work—is the product of two specific histories meeting. It cannot be generalized to “human-AI collaboration” as a uniform phenomenon.

Mayr's biological species concept—that species are defined by reproductive isolation rather than morphology—applied to intelligence yields the question of whether human cognition and artificial computation are productively exchanging their fundamental operational units, or whether the exchange produces useful outputs without genuine hybridization. What is traded in human-AI collaboration is the result—the idea, the connection, the formulation—but not the generative mechanism. Segal cannot inherit Claude's capacity for rapid association across vast corpora. Claude cannot inherit Segal's capacity for biographical judgment and the phenomenology of caring about whether a sentence is true. The exchange is productive but not reproductive, in Mayr's precise sense. This suggests not futility but a specific prescription: the maintenance of the interface, the ongoing deliberate cultivation of genuine exchange, is what prevents the two forms of intelligence from drifting toward speciation rather than adaptive radiation.

Origin

Born in Kempten, Bavaria in 1904, Mayr earned his doctorate in ornithology at the University of Berlin at twenty-one and left almost immediately on two years of fieldwork in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, where he collected specimens and observed populations in conditions that made the reality of geographic variation inescapable. That fieldwork grounded his entire subsequent career: the birds he saw were not instances of types. They were populations, each varying, each shaped by the specific conditions of its island or valley, each revealing that the species concept as then understood—as a fixed essence defined by morphology—was systematically misleading.

The 1942 Systematics and the Origin of Species was the work that integrated the field naturalist's observation of geographic variation with the laboratory geneticist's understanding of heredity, producing the biological species concept—species defined by reproductive isolation rather than by similarity—and playing a central role in the Modern Synthesis. The concept was immediately controversial and has remained so; Mayr spent decades refining and defending it, and the controversy continues. But the deeper significance of the biological species concept was philosophical: it insisted that species are real divisions in nature, maintained by biological mechanisms that exist regardless of human classification. Species are not human impositions on a continuous reality; they are the structure of the biological world.

Mayr lived to one hundred, dying in February 2005, and the last decades of his career were devoted to the philosophy of biology: the proximate-ultimate distinction, the autonomy of biology from physics, the nature of teleological explanation in living systems, and the proper epistemology of a historical science. He was combative, confident, and sometimes wrong—his disagreements with Stephen Jay Gould about the pace of evolution and the role of contingency were famous for their sharpness—but he modeled a form of intellectual engagement that the AI discourse desperately needs: the insistence that conceptual precision matters as much as empirical data, and that category errors are not minor technical failures but the source of fundamental misdirection.

Key Ideas

The proximate-ultimate distinction. Mayr's most enduring contribution: every biological phenomenon requires two kinds of explanation. The proximate explanation answers how—the mechanisms, the physiology, the immediate causal chain. The ultimate explanation answers why—the evolutionary history, the selection pressures, the contingent sequence of events that produced this particular outcome. Physics operates with only one kind of causation; biology requires both. Applied to AI: the proximate question (how does the system produce useful outputs?) is increasingly well understood through interpretability research and behavioral testing. The ultimate question (why does intelligence exist in this form, and how does its specific training history determine its specific capabilities and failures?) is barely asked. Proximate and ultimate causes are both necessary; neither is sufficient.

Population thinking. Darwin's deepest conceptual revolution was the replacement of the Platonic type with the statistical population. Population thinking insists that the individual is biologically real and the type is a statistical abstraction; that variation is not noise but the signal; that the average is a convenient fiction that obscures the distribution that actually matters. Machine learning systems are, in Mayr's terminology, instruments of typological thinking carried to an extreme: they classify inputs, cluster users, assign instances to general categories. This is not an error—the typological approximation is computationally tractable and practically useful—but it systematically erases exactly the variation that population thinking insists is the reality. The recommendation algorithm misses the irreducible uniqueness of each user's taste. The language model misses the specific, half-formed intention behind each prompt.

The autonomy of biology. Mayr's sustained campaign against reductionism was not a claim that physics is wrong about biological systems. It was a claim that biological entities have properties—variation, inheritance, selection, adaptation, contingency—that physical entities do not share, and that historical explanation is not derivable from physical law. The autonomy of biology implies a parallel claim about intelligence: intelligence uses computation, depends on computation, but does not reduce to computation, because intelligent systems have histories that their architectures alone cannot explain.

The biological species concept and reproductive isolation. Mayr's definition of species by reproductive isolation rather than morphology implies that what matters is not what two populations look like but whether they can exchange their fundamental operational units in a way that produces viable offspring. The biological species concept applied to intelligence asks: are human cognition and artificial computation exchanging their deep generative mechanisms, or merely their surface outputs? The distinction determines whether the collaboration between human and machine tends toward fusion or toward the maintenance of two distinct forms of intelligence in productive but bounded exchange.

Contingency and the lucky current. In the 1995 exchange with Carl Sagan about the probability of extraterrestrial intelligence, Mayr insisted that out of perhaps fifty billion species that have existed on Earth, exactly one had developed high intelligence—and this fact argues not for inevitability but for profound improbability. The river of intelligence, in Segal's metaphor, flows; but Mayr would insist the river does not aim. Historical contingency means the specific trajectory of AI development, shaped by specific training data and engineering choices and economic pressures, is contingent and alterable—which is what makes the choices being made now consequential rather than cosmically predetermined.

Further Reading

  1. Ernst Mayr, “Cause and Effect in Biology,” Science 134 (1961) — the paper that formalized the proximate-ultimate distinction
  2. Ernst Mayr, Systematics and the Origin of Species (Columbia University Press, 1942) — the biological species concept and the Modern Synthesis
  3. Ernst Mayr, The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance (Harvard University Press, 1982) — the philosophical foundations of biology as an autonomous science
  4. Ernst Mayr, What Evolution Is (Basic Books, 2001) — his final synthesis, written at ninety-seven, including the argument for intelligence's improbability
  5. Stephen Jay Gould, Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History (W.W. Norton, 1989) — the contingency argument Mayr largely agreed with, despite his famous disagreements with Gould on other matters
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