Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de Lamarck (August 1, 1744 – December 28, 1829) was a French naturalist and an early proponent of the idea that evolution occurred and proceeded in accordance with natural laws. Lamarck is however remembered today mainly in connection with the currently discredited theory of heredity, the "inheritance of acquired traits" (see Lamarckism). He was also one of the first to use the term biology in its modern sense.¹
After years working on plants, Lamarck was appointed curator of invertebrates — another term he coined. He began a series of public lectures. Before 1800, he was an essentialist who believed species were unchanging. After working on the molluscs of the Paris Basin, he grew convinced that transmutation or change in the nature of a species occurred over time. He set out to develop an explanation, which he outlined in his 1809 work, Philosophie Zoologique.
Lamarck developed two laws
Lamarck saw spontaneous generation as being ongoing, with the simple organisms thus created being transmuted over time (by his mechanism) becoming more complex and closer to some notional idea of perfection. He thus believed in a teleological (goal-oriented) process where organisms became more perfect as they evolved. During his lifetime he became controversial; his criticism of the palaeontologist Georges Cuvier’s anti-evolutionary stance won him no friends.
Lamarck married three, possibly four, times. His first marriage was to his mistress from 1777, Marie Delaporte, the mother of his first six children, whom he married on her deathbed in 1792. He remarried in 1795 to Charlotte, but she died in 1797. His third wife was Julie Mallet in 1798. She died in 1819. Rumours exist of a fourth wife and widow but no documentary evidence exists of her.
Lamarck died penniless in Paris on 28th December, 1829.
Nowadays, the idea of passing on to offspring characteristics that were acquired during an organism's lifetime is called Lamarckian. This view was, until very recently, thought to be inconsistent with modern genetics, until the discovery of epigenetic inheritance. The memetic theory of cultural evolution could be considered a form of Lamarckian inheritance of non-genetic traits.
Darwin not only praised Lamarck in the third edition of The Origin of Species for supporting the concept of evolution and bringing it to the attention of others, but also accepted the idea of use and disuse, and developed his theory of pangenesis partially to explain its apparent occurrence. Darwin and many contemporaries also believed in the inheritance of acquired characteristics, an idea that was much more plausible before the discovery of the cellular mechanisms for genetic transmission.
The pejorative use of terms like Lamarckian stems from the confusion of students on the mechanisms of evolution. Even when natural selection is explained properly, students tend to think of traits being selected by the organism. It is also sometimes easier to say that "trait X was beneficial so the population got trait X" than to say "trait X was beneficial, individuals without trait X were less likely to propagate, resulting in the population having mostly individuals with trait X." This is a problem related to anthropomorphizing the subject.
In botany, his auctorial abbreviation is Lam.
See also: Trofim Lysenko
¹ For a discussion of linguistic priority, see History of the word Biology.
1744 births | 1829 deaths | Proto-evolutionary biologists | French scientists
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