Frank J. Sulloway, "Ernst Mayr, 1904-2005" (2005)
E-Skeptic #55 for February 11, 2005. www.skeptic.com
Ernst Mayr, 1904-2005
Remembrances and Tribute
By Frank J. Sulloway
Editor’s note:
I received the following remembrances of and tribute to Ernst Mayr a
couple of days after his death on February 3, 2005, from Frank Sulloway
during his expedition retracing Darwin’s footsteps in the Galapagos Islands
(there are Internet cafés on two of the islands). As a young man Frank was a
student of Mayr’s at Harvard University, and later he became a close friend
and collaborator of Ernst. I find it most fitting that the following
remembrance was written in the islands that inspired Darwin and subsequently
led to the discovery of the mechanism of evolution—natural selection. I have
been a close friend of Frank’s for many years now. Frank and I conducted an
interview with Ernst that was published in Skeptic magazine, which we
reposted on e-Skeptic (archived at www.skeptic.com/eskeptic07-05-04.html)
the week of Ernst’s 100th birthday this last July, 2004. I called Ernst on
his birthday to wish him a happy hundredth, and even at his advanced age,
and not really knowing me all that well (we corresponded several times over
the past decade and I spent an afternoon at his home a few years ago), he
carried on a lucid and stimulating conversation more advanced than that of a
man half his age (me!). Frank spoke of Ernst always in positive terms and on
many levels: as student, colleague, and friend. But Frank was most proud of
the fact that Ernst once told Frank that he was “the son I never had.” I
cannot think of a sweeter and more touching connection to the man who did
more to reinforce, refine, and restructure evolutionary theory in the 20th
century.
—Michael Shermer
Ernst Mayr was, without doubt, the most important intellectual figure in my
life. He was my closest mentor and a towering model for anyone to try to
live up to. He was always remarkably generous with his time to younger
scholars and scientists. He was well known at the Museum of Comparative
Zoology for his open-door policy, which effectively invited people to drop
in unannounced, so that they could chat with Ernst about scientific
matters.
Ernst dutifully read and commented on every paper that I ever gave him to
read, supplying excellent advice regarding corrections and revisions. He
read my undergraduate thesis on “Darwin and the Beagle Voyage” (1969),
although he was not required to do so, and he voluntarily wrote a report
about it for the History of Science Department, which I was very flattered
to be able to read later, because it was so positive and thoughtful. Others
were often surprised by the fact that Ernst would read papers sent to him by
mail, by people he did not even know, and he would supply important comments
and suggestions. Once I tried to thank Ernst for reading a paper of mine, by
presenting him with a bottle of cognac. But Ernst would not accept it,
saying that it was a pleasure for him to read such manuscripts and that I
should drink the bottle myself. How he had time to read all these
manuscripts, and to write and proof read everything he published himself,
remains a mystery to me.
I first got to know Ernst in 1967, when I was just 20 years old and
organizing the Harvard-Darwin film expedition to retrace Darwin’s route in
South America. Ernst agreed to be the chairman of my little film advisory
group, which I had assembled to give this project a semblance of legitimacy.
Thanks in part to Ernst’s name and prestige, I was able to raise $25,000 for
this film expedition—a considerable sum in those days. While in South
America for four months, doors opened at the very mention of Ernst’s name,
and local scientists eagerly offered their services as guides into the
jungles of Brazil, the pampas of Argentina, the channels of Tierra del
Fuego, and the mountains of the Chilean Andes. Because of my own association
with Ernst, people often thought I was a Ph.D., but I had yet to obtain even
my bachelor’s degree!
After I wrote a paper for Ernst’s graduate seminar in evolutionary theory,
in the fall of 1970, Ernst took me under his wing. He was very impressed by
this paper, which showed that Darwin had mistaken the various forms of
Darwin’s finches in the Galapagos Islands, for the forms they mimic through
convergent evolution, and hence that Darwin had not been an evolutionist
during his visit to these islands. I showed that it was the case of the
Galapagos mockingbirds that finally converted Darwin to evolution, after his
return to England and a meeting, in March 1837, with ornithologist John
Gould. (Gould, it turned out, understood Darwin’s Galapagos birds much
better than Darwin did.) Ernst always dutifully cited me for these
historical discoveries.
After I took his seminar in 1970, Ernst used to invite me to informal
seminars at his house. I also used to drop by on an occasional basis just to
chat, since I lived nearby. Mostly Ernst brought me up to date about his
latest ideas, or talked about the things that interested him, and I just
listened. Many times, in subsequent years, Ernst brought up how much he had
enjoyed these conversations and how much he missed them. But I never felt
that I was contributing much, although I think I was rather good at knowing
just enough about whatever was being discussed to be able to make some
comment that allowed Ernst to expand to a new or related topic. In short, I
was good at keeping him talking (and I did enjoy these encounters). I also
taught two seminar courses with Ernst in the history of biology, in the
early 1970s, and this was a great learning experience for me.
I owe much of the success of my career to Ernst and his unflagging support
for me. In 1973 he nominated me for a Junior Fellowship at Harvard, and when
the Senior Fellows did not see things his way, he nominated me again the
next year. This time I got the fellowship, one of the most prestigious that
a young scholar could possibly receive. Ernst was like that—he did not take
no for an answer when he believed strongly in something or someone. Other
letters of recommendation that he wrote for me were doubtless largely
responsible for my receiving subsequent fellowships.
There are so many ways that Ernst’s intellectual style has influenced my own
scholarship. His thinking was so logical, his scholarship so meticulous, and
his intellectual sweep so impressive. In my own career, I always tried to
live up to this stellar example and to make Ernst proud of the fact that he
had nurtured my scholarship along and had supported me so generously with
his time, recommendations, and advice.
Ernst’s influence on me continues as I write here in the Galapagos Islands.
I recently read a manuscript by a scientist visiting these islands who works
on Darwin’s finches. I thought the conclusions of the paper were basically
wrong because they violated Ernst’s fundamental ideas about the role of
geographical isolation in the emergence of new species. So I rewrote the
conclusion to the paper, showing that the interesting case, involving
Geospiza fuliginosa (the Small Ground Finch) that scientist had studied was
actually consistent with Ernst’s model of allopatric speciation, although
the scientist’s findings perhaps added a new wrinkle to that model. My
corrections were entirely accepted, and now I am a coauthor on the paper.
But it is really to Ernst that I owe such a basic understanding of the
origin of species.
I have heard Ernst say, several times, how much his own career was
enabled by luck, such as the wonderful episode of seeing a pair of birds
with a red bill in Germany, that had not been seen in that region for nearly
a century—and how this chance observation led to his meeting Stresemann and
his subsequent career in science. Well, the greatest stroke of good fortune
in my career was my meeting Ernst as a young undergraduate in 1967, and the
considerable interest he took, thereafter, in my own career. On so many
levels, then, I shall miss Ernst.
Frank J. Sulloway
Visiting Scholar
Department of Psychology
University of California
Berkeley, CA
[email protected]
Website: http://www.sulloway.org
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