----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, September 01, 2002 12:01 AM
Subject: Re: Alexander replies to Dieter Zimmer on
Darwin
Yes, Nabokov at times willingly conceded that
mimetic phenomena do afford protection, not only in his 1949 paper on Lycaeides
Ms. Alexander cites. Even in the passage that is always quoted ("Gift" p.110) he
writes that "the incredible artistic wit of mimetic disguise [...] was too
refined for the mere [!] deceiving of accidental predators..." That is, he did
not at all deny that mimicry was useful as a protective device. His argument was
that there was a special quality to some mimetic phenomena that could not be
explained by its usefulness and hence by natural selection ("the struggle
for existence"). This additional quality he saw in a kind of aesthetic surplus:
some cases of mimicry, he thought, are too refined for the discriminative
powers of the predators--these cannot really appreciate the perfection of the
thing. Now this is not philosophy of nature but sound science, for it is a
testable hypothesis that can be either confirmed or falsified. It could not be
done in a general way--each instance would have to be examined. To my
knowledge there has not been a single instance so far proving that, yes, less
perfect mimicry would afford just the same protection. Predation usually
does not happen in an atmosphere of leisure where a predator can quietly
contemplate and appreciate the degree of perfection in his potential prey. He
has to decide quickly whether he wants to risk taking a pick at a lep that is in
movement and only partly visible to him. So even a very imperfect mimic might
enjoy some protection, benefiting from a moment of doubt as to its
palatability. This, however, does not exclude that a more perfect mimic
might enjoy more protection. It is not an all-or-nothing affair as Ms. Alexander
seems to suggest. Still there actually might be cases of aesthetic surplus
in mimicry, and as I argued in my 1999 paper they might be explainable
by genetic drift (neutral evolution) or structural constraints (structural
evolution). The important thing to realize is that neutral or structural
evolution, if they can be shown to have produced a certain case of mimicry,
would not have happened in place of natural selection but just supplemented
it.
All of this underscores my point that Nabokov was
not irreconcilably far removed from the theory of natural selection
and might after all have adjusted his thinking to it if the evidence had
pointed that way.
Dieter E. Zimmer
Berlin, September 1, 2002