Self-organization in embryonic development: myth and reality
Stuart A. Newman

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the concept of self-organization in embryonic development, distinguishing between physical processes and evolved biological mechanisms, and proposes a framework to understand their relationship.
Contribution
It clarifies the distinctions between physical self-organization and biological development, offering a conceptual framework linking these processes in embryogenesis.
Findings
Embryonic forms often resemble physical self-organizing patterns.
Development employs evolved mechanisms distinct from physical self-organization.
Physical effects have served as evolutionary templates for embryonic morphology.
Abstract
"Self-organization" has become a watchword in developmental biology, characterizing observations in which embryonic or induced stem cells of animals replicate morphological steps and outcomes seen in intact embryos. While the term was introduced in the 18th century by the philosopher Immanuel Kant to describe the goal-directed properties of living systems, it came into modern use for non-living materials in which complex forms and patterns emerge through dynamical, energy-expending physical processes. What is the relationship among these uses of the term? While multicellular forms arose dozens of times from single-celled organisms, only some of these undergo development, and not all developmental processes are self-organizing. The evolution of the animals (metazoans) from unicellular holozoans was accompanied by the addition of novel gene products which mediated the constitution the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and environmental studies
