Dictionary Definition
atavistic adj : characteristic of an atavist
[syn: throwback(a)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Pertaining to atavists.
Translations
pertaining to atavists
- Finnish: atavistinen
Extensive Definition
The term atavism (derived from the Latin atavus,
a great-grandfather's grandfather and, thus, more generally, an
ancestor) denotes the tendency to revert to ancestral type. An
atavism is a real or supposed evolutionary throwback, such
as traits reappearing which had disappeared generations ago.
Atavisms occur because genes for previously existing
phenotypical features
are often preserved in DNA, even though the
genes are not expressed in some or most of the organisms possessing
them.
Examples
Examples observed include:- hind legs on whales
Atavisms have been observed in humans as well.
For example, babies have been born with a vestigial tail, called
"coccygeal process", "coccygeal projection", and "caudal
appendage".
Atavism in history
During the interval between the acceptance of
evolution and the rise
of modern understanding of genetics, atavism was used to
account for the reappearance in an individual of a trait
after several generations of absence. Such an individual was
sometimes called a "throwback". The term is often used in
connection with the unexpected reappearance of primitive traits in
organisms.
The notion of atavism was used frequently by
social
Darwinists, who claimed that inferior
races displayed atavistic traits, and represented more
primitive traits than their own race. Both the notion of atavism,
and Haeckel's
recapitulation
theory, are saturated with notions of evolution as progress,
as a march towards greater complexity and superior ability.
In addition, the concept of atavism as part of an
individualistic explanation of the causes of criminal deviance was
popularised by the Italian criminologist Cesare
Lombroso in the 1870s. He attempted to identify physical
characteristics common to criminals and labeled those he found as
atavistic, ‘throwback’ traits that determined 'primitive' criminal
behavior. His statistical evidence and the notion that physical
traits determine inevitable criminality (an idea closely related to
the concepts of eugenics) have long since been
debunked, but the concept that physical traits may affect the
likelihood of criminal behavior in the individual remains popular
in some circles.
The notion that somehow, atavisms could be made
to accumulate by selective
breeding led to breeds such as the Heck cattle.
This had been bred from ancient landraces with selected
primitive traits, in an attempt of "reviving" the extinct aurochs.
Cultural references to atavism
The term atavism is sometimes also applied in the
discussion of culture. Some social scientists describe the
return of older, "more primitive" tendencies (e.g., warlike
attitudes, "clan identity,"
etc. -- anything suggesting the social and political atmosphere of
thousands of years ago) as "atavistic." "Resurgent
Atavism" is a common name for the belief that people in the
modern era are beginning to revert to ways of thinking and acting
that are throwbacks to a former time. This is especially used by
sociologists in reference to violence. Marxists refer to
pre-capitalist classes (such as the peasantry, the aristocracy and
the petit-bourgeoisie) as "atavistic" to indicate that they do not
fit into the bipolar class division (bourgeoisie/proletariat) of modern
capitalist society. Marxists therefore view them as a reactionary
force that will try to stop not only socialism, but also bourgeois
progress itself.
The neo-pagan
subculture also uses this same terminology ("atavism" or "resurgent
atavism") to describe how modern, Western countries are
experiencing both the decline of Christianity
and the rise of religious movements inspired by the pagan religions of centuries
past. Some cite the rise of environmentalism,
scientific inquiry, and
liberalization
of society as contributing to an increasingly secular society, one in which
religious sentiments are more frequently tied with an appreciation
of the physical world rather than set against it. Occasionally, the
use of these terms in reference to "alternative" spirituality or in an
occult context implies
the use of violence to assert these changing religious views--for
example, in the
book Lords of Chaos a rash of church burnings across Scandinavia has
been described as a part of this trend because many of the
perpetrators were self-described "pagans" seeking to overthrow what
they deemed to be centuries of religious
oppression by Christianity.
Atavism is a key term in Joseph
Schumpeter's explanation of World War I
in 20th Century liberal
Europe. He
defends the liberal belief in international
relations that an international society built on commerce will
avoid war because of its destructiveness and comparative
cost. His reason for WWI is termed "Atavism," in which he
claims the vestigial governments in Europe (the German
Empire, Russian
Empire, Ottoman
Empire, and Austro-Hungarian
Empire) pulled the liberal Europe into war, and that the
liberal structure of the continent did not cause it. He used this
idea to say that liberalism and commerce would
continue to have a soothing effect in international relations, and
that war would not arise in nations who are built on commercial
ties.
See also
External links
References
atavistic in German: Atavismus
atavistic in Spanish: Atavismo
atavistic in French: Atavus
atavistic in Italian: Atavismo
atavistic in Dutch: Atavisme
atavistic in Japanese: 隔世遺伝
atavistic in Polish: Atawizm
atavistic in Portuguese: Atavismo
atavistic in Russian: Атавизм
atavistic in Slovenian: Atavizem
atavistic in Finnish: Atavismi
atavistic in Swedish: Atavism
atavistic in Ukrainian: Атавізм
atavistic in Chinese: 返祖现象
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aboriginal, ancestral, antepatriarchal,
autochthonous,
bodily, born, coeval, congenital, connatal, connate, connatural, constitutional, genetic, hereditary, humanoid, in the blood,
inborn, inbred, incarnate, indigenous, inherited, innate, instinctive, instinctual, native, native to, natural, natural to, organic, patriarchal, physical, preadamite, preglacial, prehistoric, prehuman, primal, prime, primeval, primitive, primogenial, primoprimitive, primordial, pristine, protohistoric, protohuman, reactionary, recessive, recidivist, recidivous, regressive, retrograde, retrogressive, retrorse, retroverse, returnable, reversible, reversional, reversionary, revertible, revulsionary, temperamental