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The Gaia
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"Giants of Gaia" - Diana Stanley | |
Section 2: Dr James Lovelock:
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Web Publication by Mountain Man Graphics, Australia in the Southern Autumn of 1996 | |
Dr James Lovelock, a British Chemist specialising in the atmospheric sciences, was a recognised leader in his field. He was to invent an electron capture detector, capable of tracing extremely small amounts of tracer elements in gases, which was used by the ozone monitoring research concerning the effect of CFC's in the early 1970's. Almost a decade before this, NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) requested the presence of Lovelock in their project teams relating to the scientific search for the evidence of life on Mars.
In collaboration with other project researchers, Lovelock predicted the absence of life on mars based on the consideration of the Martian atmosphere and its state of being in a chemically dead equilibrium. In contrast, the Terran atmosphere is in a chemical state described as being far from equilibrium. The unlikely balance of atmospheric gases which comprise the Earth's atmosphere is quite unique in our solar system. This fact would be clearly visible to any extra-terrestrial observer, by comparison of the images of the planets Venus, Earth and Mars.
And so it was to be in the history of mankind, in the last handful of decades of the second millennium, mankind journeyed into space and became - through image technology - an extra-terrestrial observer:
| VENUS | EARTH | MARS |
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| CO2 (95%) | N (77%), O (21%) | CO2 (95%) |
The question which Dr James Lovelock obviously asked himself was
...
WHY was the Earth different?
Research concerning the chemical analysis of the composition of the Venusian atmosphere has yielded figures of 95-96% carbon dioxide, 3-4% nitrogen, with traces of oxygen, argon and methane. The same analysis for Mars returns 95.3% carbon dioxide, 2.7% nitrogen, 1.6% argon, only 0.15% oxygen and only 0.03% water. In comparison the Earth's atmosphere at present is 77% nitrogen, 21% oxygen with traces of carbon dioxide, methane and argon.
What was happening upon the Earth which enabled the maintenance of such an unlikely combination of chemical gases - specifically nitrogen and oxygen. What complex processes are at work within the terrestrial atmosphere - and have occurred for many billions of years - to explain this uniqueness? How have these processes arisen and what today maintains these processes at this equilibrium which is chemically far from equilibrium?
Why is it so
?In the late 1960's Lovelock took the first steps in
answering these questions by considering the the beginnings of life upon the
planet Earth. The earliest of life-forms existed in the ancient oceans and were
the smallest and the simplest - less than single celled. Contemporary
microbiological research points to the fact that almost 3 billion years ago,
bacteria and photosynthetic algae began extracting the carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere and releasing oxygen back into it. Gradually - over vast geological
time spans - the atmospheric chemical content was altered away from the
dominance of carbon dioxide, towards the dominance of a mixture of nitrogen and
oxygen - towards an atmosphere which would favorably support organic life
powered by aerobic combustion - such as animals and mankind.
And as the story goes, while on a walk in the countryside about his home in Wilshire, England, Lovelock described his hypothesis to his neighbour William Golding (the novelist - eg: Lord of the Flies), and asked advise concerning a suitable name for it.The resultant term "Gaia" - after the Greek goddess who drew the living world forth from Chaos - was chosen.
Thus the Gaia Hypothesis was first postulated.
However, there was a big difference between postulating such a grand schemed hypothesis and having it accepted by the traditional scientific community, and there remained much research work to be done in order to be able to more clearly specify the entirety of the processes by which the modern planetary atmosphere had been evolved and was continuing to be evolved. And in this task, in the early years of his further research concerning the Gaia hypothesis, Lovelock was supported by the collaboration of Dr Lynn Margulis, a leading and forward thinking American microbiologist.
And in another section we find speculative thoughts concerning Gaia, and one's which probably appealed to many of the readers who supported the various environmental groups, but at the same time provoked the hard-lined scientific critics of the Gaia Hypothesis:
We see Lovelock evolving and refining the specification of the nature of Gaia:
Lovelock goes on to say ...
While the scientific communities continued to debate the level of acceptablity of the Gaia Hypothesis, the global and holistic perspective of the concept continued to capture the imagination of people from all walks of life. The indigenous cultures who saw the nature of earth as a sacred spirit, others who sought the "oneness" in nature, those concerned for the environment - the trees, the rivers and the oceans, and those seeking contentious and revolutionary ideas, and those seeking religious frameworks - to an increasing multicultural and multidisciplined audience the concept of the Gaia Hypothesis was nourished and supported as a New Age paradigm.
Multicellular Red Herrings flourished in the primordial seas of Gaian debate during the 1970's and 1980's [and of course still do to a large extent] and while the non-scientific applicability of the concept flourished far and wide, they tended to very much to reduce the concentration upon the primary scientific issues of the hypothesis, its analyses and the implications of these.
Largely however, these misundertandings were unavoidable in the initial statements of the specification of the hypothesis due to its intrinsic holistic nature and the scope of the global concept which it attempted to portray. Moreover, what was becoming clearer was that the concept had applicability to many disciplines and to many inter-disciplinary issues. The problem was in being specific.
Skeptics had argued (and still do) that this Gaia was teleological - that it supposed the evidence of some design or purpose in the nature of the biosphere - in particular the adminsitration thereof - and that this was contra to the accepted position of Darwinian evolutionary doctrine which supported natural selection. Dr Lynn Margulis had much to reply in this area regarding the systematics of Darwinian evolution in regard to the smallest and earliest of living things upon the earth. Yet in his research and in the above publication, Lovelock countered this argument with ecological considerations:
And then later, elsewhere in the Ages of Gaia ...
But perhaps the most popularly known counter-argument employed by Lovelock at this time (in fact in 1983) was the systematic behaviour of the theoretical planet of Daisyworld which, like the earth, maintained its global temperature reasonably constant in the face of time and the increasing energy output of its sun.
[A]
Early in the history of the planet, when the young Sun was still relatively
cool (see figure below), dark daisies would be the fittest species, because
clusters of them create local warm spots that favor the growth of more
daisies. Soon the planet would be covered by dark daisies, and their
collective effect would be to increase the global temperature above what it
would have been in the absence of life
[B]
When the dark daisies had established a comfortable temperature, gray and
white daisies would begin to take advantage of the pleasant conditions. At
first, gray daisies would do better than light ones because clusters of
reflective light daisies wouldn't be able to keep local temperatures warm
enough for survival.
Global Temperature and Daisy Population
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CreditsTo: Lawrence University, Environmental Studies |
[C]
Eventually, the Sun's output would reach the point where unmoderated surface
temperatures would exceed the maximum tolerable to daisies.
[D]
At this point, light-colored daisies would begin to become the fittest species
because clusters of them would create cool spots that would favor the growth
of more daisies. As light-colored daisies spread, their collective effect
would be to decrease the global temperature well below what it would have been
in the absence of any life forms. In this way, individual daisies, without
knowledge of or concern for the planet as a whole, would have acted to control
the global environment.
[E]
Finally, the heat produced by the Sun would be so great that neither type of
daisy would be able to moderate the temperature, and all species would die
out.
NOTE:
In the lower plot, shaded area indicates temperature range tolerable by
daisies.
Thus Lovelock attempted to answer the critics who perceived Gaia to be teleological. Daisyworld as depicted above is a model that shows the manner in which a homeostatic state can be maintained by individual organisms acting only in their own interests - affording the global system a reasonably constant temperature range in the face of growing solar strength.
The traditional physical earth sciences of geology, oceanography, meteorology and geography had beforehand never seriously considered or analysed the complex nature of the ecological systems abounding in their respective domains and cross-domain systems. However it is interesting to note that James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis acknowledge the geologist-physician James Hutton's concept of a living Earth as a forerunner to the Gaia hypothesis.
In fact, James Hutton (1727–1797), often considered to be the father of
modern geoscience, authored the concept of the Just as human physiology can be viewed as a system of interacting components
(nervous, pulmonary, circulatory, endocrine systems, etc), so too can the Earth
be understood as a system of four principal components (atmosphere, biosphere,
geosphere, and hydrosphere). Thus we find this more holistic approach the Gaian
specification being made by Lovelock's use of this term "geophysiology" for the
investigations of Earth, life and ecological science. As with human physiology,
it emphasizes its biological base, the perspective of the whole system, and an
interest in systemic health.
In the same year (1988) that this second book was published, the debates
concerning the Gaia Hypothesis within the scientific community were still in
full swing, and it was therefore decided to hold a symposium in relation to this
matter, at which various scientists had the opportunity of presenting papers.
The collective information presented at this meeting was - three years later -
to become the substance of the third book concerning the Gaia Hypothesis to
which Dr James Lovelock had contributed.
Implication in short ... That the Earth could be considered a vast living
system in its own right.
That such a meeting of eminent physical scientists would actually convene
over the discussion of such a matter would have been inconceivable to the
traditional physical scientist a mere quarter-century earlier. In fact, just
over one century earlier (1882), James Clerk Maxwell, the founding father of the
modern physical sciences - specifically Electromagnetic Theory - published a
book entitled "Matter
and Motion". Although it was written in non-technical terms for the aspiring
nineteenth century "NewAge scientist", owing to its easy presentation, clarity
and methodical exposition of the contemporary body of scientific knowledge, it
was to become one of the standard texts for all future physical scientists -
students and professors alike. The very first article of the introduction is as
follows:
Physical Science is that department of knowledge which relates to the order
of nature, or in other words, to the regular succession of events. The name of
physical science, however, is often applied in a more or less restricted
manner to those brances of science in which the phenomena considered are of
the simplest and most abstract kind, excluding the consideration of the
more complex phenomena, such as those observed in living beings. And yet here in 1988, a group of geophysical scientists convene a meeting
over the Gaia Hypothesis - the hypothesis which implies that the Earth may be
considered as a vast living system.
This would have been inconceivable - only prior to the time of
space-flight. As a direct consequence of space flight - and through the
technology of computerised image communications - for the first time in his
generic history, man was able to physically perceive his native global
terrestrial home from an extra-terrestrial vantage point.
And if it was not the early pictures of the earth which captured the
attention of the planetary inhabitants, then it was the time in the year of 1969
when the Eagle landed on the moon.
As a result of this symposium of 1988, while it was still clear that the Gaia
Hypothesis was not accepted by many of the contemporary peers of Lovelock, it
was equally clear that there was growing support from the non-scientific members
of the global community. While the scientific community's consideration of the
Gaia Hypothesis was being readied for entry into its second decade of debate,
the holistic ontology which it represented was eagerly applied to an extremely
wide spectrum of ecological and environmental sciences, social sciences,
intellectual and philosophical movements and other not-specifically-intellectual
reforms which collectively grouped themselves - as a spectrum of humanity
through the prism of Gaia - as "New Age".
Certain claims concerning the Gaia Hypothesis could not be refuted - in
particlular the claim that the biota has a substantial influence over certain
aspects of the abiotic world. We thus find Lovelock confident enough with
the Gaia Hypothesis to the extent that he puts it forward - not as a hypothesis
- but as the Gaia Theory:
Like living organisms and many closed-loop self-regulating systems, it
would be expected to show emergent properties; that is, the whole will be more
than the sum of its parts. Quite clearly, for many scientists - feet firmly planted upon Earth - who
were immediately unprepared to relinquish the traditional scientific
methodology, there were many flaws in Lovelock's arguments. However, it also
became evident at this symposium (Scientists on Gaia) that the Gaia Hypothesis
presented not just one but a range previously unrelated issues concerning the
complex nature of the global ecology.
This important point was addressed by James Kirchner (UC Berkeley). His
contructive criticism was that the Gaia Hypothesis may be better viewed as a
collection of related hypotheses, which could be classified within a spectrum
from weak Gaia (which related to the known evidence of biochemical cycles) to
strong (as a form of global physiology). Hence the polarization of pro- vs.
anti-Gaia scientists is unnecessary and unproductive. His preparation of this
analysis was well received by other critics as a suitable working definition of
terms, has been since commonly quoted in internet FAQ's relating to Gaia, and is
set out below:
James W. Kirchner went on to publish further critique in his article "The
Gaia hypothesis: can it be tested?" in Reviews of Geophysics 27:2, 223-235,
1989. In fact there is much traditional resistance to Gaia simply because it is
claimed that it is not a scientific hypothesis in the Popperian sense as it
cannot be falsified. On the other hand there are those who would argue that the
Popperian definition implies the methodology of reductionism, and that
reductionism may not be able to fully define the quintessence of extremely
complex and inter-connected systems.
In response to such criticism Lovelock writes:
In conclusion to this section relating to the debate and development of
acceptance of issues relating to Gaia during this 1988 Symposium, presentation
of papers and their later publication in a book entitled "Scientists on Gaia" by
Stephen Schneider and Penelope Boston (MIT Press). The following extract
provides a summarisation of the development of the Gaia Hypothesis as at the
1990's and attempts to delineate the relationship between it and the traditional
doctrinal stream which has been named Earth System Science:
When first introduced in the early 1970s the Gaia hypothesis attracted the
most attention from theologians interested in the possibility that the Earth
controlled its environment on purpose (i.e., teleological implications), from
those looking for "oneness" in nature, and from those defending polluting
industries, for whom the Gaia hypothesis provided a convenient excuse whereby
some collective set of natural processes would largely offset any potential
damages from human disturbance to earth systems. Although none of these
aspects was underlined in the scientific work of Lovelock and Margulis, these
nonscientific side issues diverted attention in the scientific community away
from a serious anaylsis of the Gaia hypotheses and its implications. By the
mid 1980s, Gaia advocates and detractors began a series of critiques and
countercritiques, often carried out through third parties such as television
documentary producers One of us (Schneider) having been party to such a debate
came to realize the absurdity of the situation in which an interesting and
controversial idea like the Gaia hypothesis was being debated largely in
nonscientific forums, if at all"
Earth System Science is not entirely equivalent to the Gaia Hypothesis,
although both take an interdisciplinary approach to studying systems
operations on a planetary-scale. Earth System Science seeks to understand the
mass and energy transfers among interacting components of the Earth System
(biosphere, hydrophere, geosphere, atmosphere, and anthrosphere), which is not
entirely synonymous to the the Gaia principle which purports that for
practical purposes it may be useful to consider the earth as if it were a
living organism. Clearly however, the new insights of global environmental and ecological
modelling afforded by the Gaia Hypothesis, now Theory, by Lovelock and Margulis
were beginning to open up an entirely new range of research projects,
experimental programs and inter-disciplinary areas which beforehand were
inconceivable to the structure of the traditional physical sciences.
In the closing years of the 1980's and through the 1990's many such new
research areas were to be formally chartered, and it is not within the scope of
this document to specify them all. However, it is perhaps interesting to see an
example, and the following brief account, given by Richard H. Gammon at
Harvard University, concerns the specification of "geophysiology":
The elucidation of the relevant chemical species, reactions, and fluxes
governing the natural recycling of the element essential for life is the
primary goal of the interdisciplinary research field called "biogeochemistry."
The controversial hypothesis that the living earth can best be understood as a
self-regulating biochemical system which controls, or at least strongly
influences, the mean state of the planet has stimulated recent research in
which might be called "geophysiology" or "biochemical
climatology." Such it was then, that at the closing years of the 1980's, although the Gaia
hypothesis was still being debated from various traditional scientific
disciplinarian viewpoints, the concept itself had promulgated a renewed research
into the global (extra-terrestrial) perspective of the living and the non-living
terrestrial systems. The seed of ideas and research which in the past, prior to
space flight and the Gaia Hypothesis, had fallen through the cracks of the floor
of the tradional scientific structures, were now being caught in the newly spun
networking of emergent inter-disciplinary scientific fields, and were
flourishing.
Further in this review, and concerning the microbiological research results
which had been so supportive (in the work of Dr Lynn Margulis) of
the Gaia Hypothesis and Theory, Lovelock acknowledges the ground breaking work
of that field of science. Clearly, the advent of means whereby the behaviour of
extremely complex systems may be analysed - via data processing machinery - has
assisted scientific understanding in many fields, no less in the fields of the
Life Sciences.
In 1989, James Lovelock prepared the Forward to a work by the writer Elisabet
Sahtouris entitled Earthdance: Living Systems in Evolution. Recently, the
entirety of the work has been made available on the web, with the author's
invocation of To
my planet and its people, and the following continuation of Lovelock's
thoughts have been extracted and are presented:
In the intervening years, even in the short time since I wrote my own words
about Gaia being an unconventional topic, less eccentric scientists than I
have declared Gaia more conventional, meaning that Gaia theory is now
recognized as a legitimate and fruitful basis for scientific investigation and
is thus being brought into the scientific fold. In our first account of Gaia
as a system neither Lynn Margulis nor I fully understood what it was we were
describing. Our language tended to be anthropomorphic and, especially in my
first book, Gaia, poetic. Not surprisingly, some scientists misunderstood our
intentions and accused us of saying that organisms acted from some in-built
purpose to regulate the planet's climate and chemical composition. The notion
of purpose in natural systems is of course a scientific taboo, a sin of
heresy. That heresy is avoided in the clearer modern version, which is Gaia
theory. This theory sees the evolution of the material environment and the
evolution of organisms as tightly coupled into a single and indivisible
process or domain. Gaia, with its capacity for homeostasis, is an emergent
property of this domain. There is no more need to invoke notions of purpose or
foresight in the evolution of this domain than there is in the evolution of
our own bodies within Gaia
As the title of a recent article in Science put it, "No Longer
Willful, Gaia Becomes Respectable." This means that Gaia scientists will be
constrained by bureaucratic forces, by the pressures of tenure, and by the
tribal divisions and rules of scientific disciplines. That, in turn, means we
will need some antidote to the inevitable separations and constraints. We will
need independent synthesizers and visionaries who can make sense of the data
produced by the scientific establishment and present it to us in ways that
make our living planet real to us within the Gaian context and thus give
meaning to our own lives and those of our children and grandchildren.
Scientists on Gaia - The Symposium [1988]
And the publication Scientists on Gaia -
Clearly, as was evidenced at
this symposium and in the resultant publication, there existed a great range of
scientific opinion on the Gaia Hypothesis - dependant upon which issue of the
concept was being discussed. And this is not really surprising in consideration
of the implications of the hypothesis.
Edited by Stephen
Schneider and Penelope Boston, MIT Press 1991.
Article
1 - Nature of Physical Science
Kirchner's Spectrum of Gaian Hypotheses ... from Weak to Strong
Showing an approximate indication of the measure of support from the
scientific community
The Hypotheses
The specification of the hypotheses
STATUS
INFLUENTIAL
The biota has a substantial influence
over certain aspects of the
abiotic world.
Supported
CO-EVOLUTIONARY
The biota influences the abiotic environment,
and the latter
influences the evolution of
the biota by Darwinian processes.
Debated
HOMEOSTATIC
The interplay between biota and environment is
characterized by
stabilizing negative feedback loops.
Debated
TELEOLOGICAL
The atmosphere is kept in homeostasis
not just by the biosphere,
but in
some sense _for_ the biosphere.
Daisyworld
OPTIMIZING
The biota manipulates its environment for the purpose
of creating
biologically favorable conditions for itself.
Skeptical "Fortunately for me I was brought up in that school of science that
believes in reading the books after rather than before an experiment.""For more than a century students of the evolution of the living and
nonliving parts of the Earth have known that life influences the physical and
chemical characteristic of the planet. Nevertheless, the dominant paradigm in
earth sciences has been that inexorable inorganic forces, such as changing
energy output from the Sun, collisions of the Earth with extraterrestrial
bodies, continental drift, or other orbital element variations have been the
principal driving forces behind climate twenty years ago. James Lovelock and
Lynn Margulis coined the phrase the Gaia hypothesis to suggest not only that
life has a greater influence on the evolution of the Earth than is typically
assumed across most earth science disciplines but also that life serves as an
active control system. In fact, they suggest that life on Earth provides a
cybernetic, homeostatic feeback system, leading to stabilization of global
temperature, chemical composition, and so forth.
The habitability of the planet depends directly on the
radiative/photochemical properties of biologically produced trace gases, which
together constitute less than a percent of the total atmospheric burden. These
trace gases are generally the volatile, often methylated products of microbial
metabolic processes occurring in low-oxygen sites in both terrestrial and
marine environments. The present atmospheric composition, and consequently the
present climate, reflects a balance of the flux of these reduced volatile
species (e.g., CH4, CH3SCH3, N2O, reactive hydrocarbons, methyl halides) from
microbial sources vs. the subsequent dispersal, photochemical oxidation, and
redeposition of degradation products as nutrients to the planetary surface and
awaiting microbes.
VENUS
EARTH
MARS
CO2 (95%)
N (77%), O (21%)
CO2 (95%)
James Lovelock - and the Gaia Theory - the 1990's
To conclude this
section on the presentation of the Gaia Theory and its development, I would
present two more recent quotations from the continuing work by Lovelock in the
publication of his ideas. The first is to be found in a book by the author
Christian de Duve, entitled "Vital Dust: A Cosmic Imperative" - Models
assembled from spare parts in review of which
Lovelock comments:
"The distinguished cosmologist Fred Hoyle made a rare error when he
rejected the possibility that life might have originated on the earth's
surface. He thought it impossible for a living cell to evolve from the mix of
chemicals coating the surface of the new-formed planet. He held this view
strongly and said: such an event is as unlikely as that of a Boeing 747
rising, ready to fly, from a tornado-swept junk yard."
The Gaia hypothesis, now accorded the status of Gaia theory, is maturing
with experience and the tests of time, not unlike the humans of this book. It
is spurring a great deal of scientific research into the geophysiology of our
living planet. It is also spurring philosophic conceptions of what it means to
our species to be part of a living planet. Some of these conceptions stay
carefully within the accepted limits of science; others have a religious bent.
Most, especially environmentalist conceptions, advocate for humanity, being
primarily concerned with human survival. A few, taking a clue from my partner
Lynn Margulis and myself, advocate for the planet and the much maligned
microbes with which the Gaian system originated and which continue to do its
basic work.
Conclusion of Section 2: Dr James Lovelock:
Formulation of the Gaia
Hypothesis
Section 3 ... Dr Lynn Margulis

The Gaia
Hypothesisproposed by
Dr. James Lovelock
in collaboration with
Dr. Lynn Margulis
"Giants of Gaia" - Diana Stanley
Section 2: Dr James Lovelock:
Formulation of the Gaia
Hypothesis
Web Publication by Mountain Man Graphics, Australia in the Southern
Autumn of 1996
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