Teleology and Teleological Explanations
Explanation by design, or teleology, is "the use of design,
purpose, or utility as an explanation of any natural phenomenon"
(Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 1966). An object
or a behavior is said to be teleological when it gives evidence
of design or appears to be directed toward certain ends. For example,
the behavior of human beings is often teleological. A person who
buys an airplane ticket, reads a book, or cultivates the earth
is trying to achieve a certain end: getting to a given city, acquiring
knowledge, or getting food. Objects and machines made by people
also are usually teleological: a knife is made for cutting, a
clock is made for telling time, a thermostat is made to regulate
temperature. Similarly features of organisms are teleological
as well: a bird's wings are for flying, eyes are for seeing, kidneys
are constituted for regulating the composition of the blood. The
features of organisms that may be said to be teleological are
those that can be identified as adaptations, whether they are
structures like a wing or a hand, or organs like a kidney, or
behaviors like the courtship displays of a peacock. Adaptations
are features of organisms that have come about by natural selection
because they serve certain functions and thus increase the reproductive
success of their carriers.
Inanimate objects and processes (other than those created by
people) are not teleological in the sense just explained because
we gain no additional scientific understanding by perceiving them
as directed toward specific ends or for serving certain purposes.
The configuration of a sodium chloride molecule (common salt)
depends on the structure of sodium and chlorine, but it makes
no sense to say that that structure is made up so as to serve
a certain purpose, such as tasting salty. Similarly, the shape
of a mountain is the result of certain geological processes, but
it did not come about so as to serve a certain purpose, such as
providing slopes suitable for skiing. The motion of the earth
around the sun results from the laws of gravity, but it does not
exist in order that the seasons may occur. We may use sodium chloride
as food, a mountain for skiing, and take advantage of the seasons,
but the use that we make of these objects or phenomena is not
the reason why they came into existence or why they have certain
configurations. On the other hand, a knife and a car exist and
have particular configurations precisely in order to serve the
purposes of cutting and transportation. Similarly, the wings of
birds came about precisely because they permitted flying, which
was reproductively advantageous. The mating display of peacocks
came about because it increased the chances of mating and thus
of leaving progeny.
The previous comments point out the essential characteristics
of teleological phenomena, which may be encompassed in the following
definition: "Teleological explanations account for the existence
of a certain feature in a system by demonstrating the feature's
contribution to a specific property or state of the system."
Teleological explanations require that the feature or behavior
contribute to the persistence of a certain state or property of
the system: wings serve for flying; the sharpness of a knife serves
for cutting. Moreover, and this is the essential component of
the concept, this contribution must be the reason why the feature
or behavior exists at all: the reason why wings came to be is
because they serve for flying; the reason why a knife is sharp
is that it is intended for cutting.
The configuration of a molecule of sodium chloride contributes
to its property of tasting salty and therefore to its use as food,
not vice versa; the potential use of sodium chloride for food
is not the reason why it has a particular molecular configuration
or tastes salty. The motion of the earth around the sun is the
reason why seasons exist; the existence of the seasons is not
the reason why the earth moves about the sun. On the other hand,
the sharpness of a knife can be explained teleologically because
the knife has been created precisely to serve the purpose of cutting.
Motorcars and their particular configurations exist because they
serve transportation, and thus can be explained teleologically.
Many features and behaviors of organisms meet the requirements
of teleological explanation. The hand of man, the wings
of birds, the structure and behavior of kidneys, the mating displays
of peacocks are examples already given.
It is useful to distinguish different kinds of design or teleological
phenomena. Actions or objects are purposeful when the end-state
or goal is consciously intended by an agent. Thus, a man mowing
his lawn is acting teleologically in the purposeful sense; a lion
hunting deer and a bird building a nest have at least the appearance
of purposeful behavior. Objects resulting from purposeful behavior
exhibit artificial (or external) teleology. A knife, a table,
a car, and a thermostat are examples of systems exhibiting artificial
teleology: their teleological features were consciously intended
by some agent.
Systems with teleological features that are not due to the
purposeful action of an agent but result from some natural process
exhibit natural (or internal) teleology. The wings of birds have
a natural teleology; they serve an end, flying, but their configuration
is not due to the conscious design of any agent. We may distinguish
two kinds of natural teleology: bounded, or determinate or necessary,
and unbounded or indeterminate or contingent.
Bounded natural teleology exists when specific end-state is
reached in spite of environmental fluctuations. The development
of an egg into a chicken is an example of bounded natural teleological
process. The regulation of body temperature in a mammal is another
example. In general, the homeostatic processes of organisms are
instances of bounded natural teleology.
Unbounded design or contingent teleology occurs when the end-state
is not specifically predetermined, but rather is the result of
selection of one from among several available alternatives. The
adaptations of organisms are designed, or teleological, in this
indeterminate sense. The wings of birds call for teleological
explanation: the genetic constitutions responsible for their configuration
came about because wings serve to fly and flying contributes to
the reproductive success of birds. But there was nothing in the
constitution of the remote ancestors of birds that would necessitate
the appearance of wings in their descendants. Wings came about
as the consequence of a long sequence of events, where at each
stage the most advantageous alternative was selected among those
that happened to be available; but what alternatives were available
at any one time depended, at least in part, on chance events.
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| Contributed by: Dr. Francisco Ayala
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