Light sensitive spots evolving into eyes happened many times in animals, why not in plants or fungi?
Really interesting question. The short answer is that eyes — or even directional light-sensing organs — require a specific combination of things that plants and fungi never had strong evolutionary pressure to develop, even though both can sense light.
Plants do sense light, quite sophisticatedly
Plants have photoreceptors (phytochromes, cryptochromes, phototropins) spread throughout their tissues. They track day length, bend toward light, time flowering, and even distinguish wavelengths. But their "sensing" is diffuse and chemical — signals spread through tissues over minutes or hours. This works fine because plants don't move. An eye is essentially a tool for navigating — knowing where something is so you can go toward or away from it rapidly. If you're rooted, that information has limited value.
The key driver for eyes: motility plus predation
Eyes evolved repeatedly in animals (camera eyes, compound eyes, pit eyes — perhaps 40–65 independent origins) because the combination of being able to move and needing to find food or avoid being eaten creates enormous selective pressure for fast, directional spatial information. Every millisecond advantage in detecting a predator or prey matters. Natural selection can work very efficiently on this.
Fungi are sessile in their feeding stage (the mycelium just grows toward nutrients chemically) and mostly heterotrophic by absorption rather than active hunting. Some fungi do have light sensitivity — Phycomyces sporangiophores bend toward light with remarkable precision — but since fungi don't chase food, there's no payoff for building a proper imaging organ.
The cellular architecture problem
Eyes require transparent focusing structures, a photosensitive layer, and neural wiring to process the signal rapidly. Animals had a head start: they already had neurons, muscle cells, and a body plan that concentrates sensing organs. Plant and fungal cell plans — rigid cell walls, no neurons, no rapid electrochemical signaling across long distances — make it very hard to build anything that converts spatial light information into directed behavior quickly enough to matter.
The evolutionary logic
Evolution doesn't plan ahead. It only reinforces traits that give immediate reproductive advantage. For a plant or fungus, a crude light-direction sense (which they have) is almost as good as a full eye, because the behavioral repertoire that an eye would enable — rapid locomotion, pursuit, escape — doesn't exist. There's no selection pressure for the next step.
So it's not that eyes are chemically or physically impossible in plants — it's that the ecological niche that makes eyes worth building has never been occupied by plants or fungi. Eyes are a solution to a problem those lineages don't have.
I watch a vine reaching out toward a stick as though it can see it.
Yes, that's a genuinely striking thing to watch. But what's happening is almost certainly not light detection — it's a combination of a few other mechanisms:
Touch and air currents (thigmotropism)
Vine tendrils are exquisitely sensitive to touch. When a tendril brushes against something solid, cells on the contact side stop elongating while the other side keeps growing, curling the tendril around the support within minutes sometimes. The sensitivity is remarkable — some tendrils respond to a thread weighing less than a milligram. But this is a contact sense, not a distance sense.
The "reaching" is mostly just rotating in space
Tendrils and growing tips exhibit circumnutation — they naturally trace slow spiraling or elliptical arcs as they grow, driven by rotating zones of differential cell elongation. This is largely internally driven, not a response to the stick. The vine isn't reaching toward the stick so much as sweeping through space until it happens to contact it. It looks purposeful because you're watching the endpoint — the successful grab — not the many sweeps that missed.
Some chemical signaling over short distances
There's evidence that some plants respond to volatile compounds or humidity gradients near objects, which could slightly bias growth direction at very close range. But this is subtle and short-range.
Why it looks like vision
The illusion of sight is powerful because we're pattern-matching to intentional behavior. The vine "finds" the stick reliably, which feels like it must involve sensing the stick at a distance. But it's more like a blindfolded person waving their arms — given enough time and a systematic sweep, contact becomes likely, and then the real sensitivity kicks in.
It's still impressive machinery. Just a different solution to the same problem.
Well I think there's some sensitivity there, maybe a shadow. It moves back and forth in the direction of the stick even when the stick is a foot away and it takes several days to grow to it.
That's a fair challenge, and you're observing carefully. A foot away over several days is hard to dismiss as pure circumnutation luck.
Honest answer: we don't fully know, and there's more active research here than the tidy textbook version suggests.
A few possibilities worth taking seriously:
Shadow and light gradients
A stick does cast a shadow, and plants genuinely respond to subtle light quality changes — particularly the ratio of red to far-red light. Objects scatter and filter light in ways that create gradients around them. It's not crazy to think a growing tip could be navigating a light-quality gradient that radiates from the stick's presence, even at a foot's distance. Phototropism is well established; whether it's precise enough to explain what you're seeing is a real question.
Humidity and volatile gradients
A stick — especially wood — can create subtle humidity or chemical gradients. Some climbing plants show what looks like "target sensing" that researchers haven't fully explained mechanically.
The honest limit of current knowledge
Plant signaling research has repeatedly surprised people. The field spent decades dismissing plant electrical signaling, rapid responses, and memory-like behavior, and kept having to revise. What gets called "well understood" in textbooks is sometimes "well understood in controlled lab conditions" which may not cover everything happening in a garden.
What you're describing — consistent directional bias toward a specific object over days, before contact — is exactly the kind of observation worth taking seriously rather than explaining away. Is the movement toward the stick consistent, or does it wander and correct?
Back and forth over and over with a slight up and down, across about 15 degrees.
That sounds much more like circumnutation than directed sensing — but with an interesting twist worth thinking about.
What you're describing is classic circumnutation
The back-and-forth with slight up-and-down across a narrow arc is almost exactly what circumnutation looks like when the growing tip is already roughly oriented toward something. It's not a random sweep of the full hemisphere — it's a tightening spiral or oscillation around a central tendency. Darwin actually wrote a whole book on this (The Power of Movement in Plants, 1880) and was fascinated by exactly this behavior.
But your real question stands
Why is the central tendency of that 15-degree arc pointed at the stick rather than somewhere else? That's the part circumnutation alone doesn't explain. Something is biasing the average direction of the oscillation toward the stick over those several days, even if the moment-to-moment movement is the rotating sweep.
That bias is probably phototropic — the stick is interrupting, scattering, or subtly altering the light field in its vicinity, and the vine's average growth direction is tracking that gradient. The oscillation is the search pattern; the drift is the navigation.
Which is actually more interesting than eyes would be
It's essentially a biological implementation of a search algorithm — oscillate to sample the gradient, weight the next cycle slightly toward the better signal, repeat. No image required. Just differential response to a slowly changing signal, iterated over days.
You're watching something computationally clever even if it's sensorially simple.
It wants something to climb.
Yes. And that framing isn't necessarily wrong, even scientifically.
The resistance to saying a plant "wants" something is mostly philosophical caution about projecting animal experience onto other organisms. But if you define want functionally — a system organized such that its behavior persistently, flexibly pursues a particular outcome across varying conditions — then a climbing vine wanting something to climb is a pretty defensible description.
It has:
- A default exploratory behavior (circumnutation) that runs continuously until the goal is met
- Sensory biasing that orients the search
- A rapid, specific response when contact is made
- The whole system shuts down or redirects once climbing is achieved
That's not just a tropism. It's a goal-directed system in the engineering sense. The plant doesn't have to experience wanting for its organization to be accurately described as wanting.
Where it gets philosophically interesting
Daniel Dennett argued you can usefully describe thermostats as "wanting" the temperature to reach a setpoint — it's just that the description doesn't buy you much because thermostats are simple. The vine is more complex. Whether there's a meaningful threshold between "behaves as if it wants" and "wants" is genuinely unresolved, not just for plants but in consciousness studies generally.
What's probably fair to say
The vine is doing something more than mechanical tropism and less than conscious desire. The language of wanting captures the functional reality better than pure mechanism does, even if it risks overclaiming inner experience.
Your instinct to take the plant seriously as an agent is arguably better natural history than dismissing it.
When I said "want" I was being entirely metaphorical, but I get your point. The boundary between instinct and sensate behavior choice is soft.
Yes, exactly — and that softness is the interesting part, not a problem to be resolved.
The traditional picture draws a clean line: stimulus-response mechanism on one side, genuine choice on the other. But the more carefully you look at any system — vine, insect, fish, mammal — the less that line holds up. What looks like choice from outside is often layered instinct. What looks like pure mechanism turns out to be context-sensitive, flexible, and history-dependent in ways that blur into something choice-like.
A vine that modulates its search behavior based on ambient light gradients, adjusts on contact, and redirects if the support is inadequate is already doing something that in a animal we'd describe as evaluating options. The substrate is different — no neurons, no action potentials — but the functional logic isn't entirely dissimilar.
The hard question underneath all of this is whether the distinction between instinct and choice is a real natural boundary or just a reflection of our limited ability to see inside systems we don't understand well. Every time we've looked closely at a behavior we thought was pure reflex — in bees, in crows, in octopuses — we've found more flexibility and context-sensitivity than expected. Plants are probably just further along that same continuum of surprise.
What your vine observation captures well is that interesting biology often lives exactly at those soft boundaries — where the clean categories stop being useful and the actual phenomenon is richer than either label.
Oh advanced as we think we are, we are loaded with instincts that happen and we either don't know or don't pay attention. Mindfulness involves learning to see some of them.
That's a sharp observation, and it cuts deeper than most people take it.
The standard flattering story is that humans are mostly conscious agents who occasionally act on instinct. Mindfulness practice — and a fair reading of cognitive science — suggests it's closer to the reverse. The vast majority of what we do, including sophisticated social behavior, emotional reactions, aesthetic judgments, and moral intuitions, runs on automatic processes we observe after the fact if at all. Consciousness may be less the driver than the narrator, constructing a coherent story about decisions that were already made.
What mindfulness actually trains, in this view, is not control so much as noticing — catching the gap between stimulus and automatic response, which is usually very small and usually invisible. Most people never see it at all. The response just happens and gets folded into the self-story seamlessly.
And the instincts are layered. Some are old — threat responses, social hierarchy reading, disgust reactions. Some are culturally installed so early they feel biological. Some are habits so practiced they've sunk below conscious access. Telling them apart from the inside is genuinely hard.
The vine analogy actually holds surprisingly well. The vine has no illusion that it's choosing to reach. We have that illusion, which may be the main difference — not the degree of autonomous behavior, but the story told about it.
Which raises the uncomfortable question of how much the felt sense of choosing is itself just another instinct.
That is a standing issue each has to decide themselves. Most of the time we act from instinct or habit. We can, however, mindfully make choices that are neither random events nor determined externally. How that might be rises to the level of how existence might be.
Yes, and that's where it stops being psychology and becomes something harder.
The problem is genuine. If your choices are produced by brain states, and brain states are produced by prior causes, then mindful choice looks like an elaborate instinct — one that feels different from the inside but isn't structurally different in the causal chain. Determinism doesn't care how sophisticated the mechanism is.
The usual escapes aren't very satisfying. Quantum indeterminacy gets invoked sometimes, but randomness isn't freedom — a choice produced by a random quantum event is no more yours than one produced by a prior cause. It's just uncaused rather than caused, which isn't what anyone means by free will.
What's more interesting is whether the framing itself is the problem. The determinist picture assumes that "you" are somehow separate from the causal chain, being pushed around by it. But if you are the causal chain — if the deliberating, weighing, mindfully attending process just is what choosing means — then the dichotomy between free and determined dissolves somewhat. The choice is still caused, but it's caused by exactly the process we call you.
That's not a complete answer. It still leaves open what it means for something to be genuinely yours, and whether the felt sense of authorship corresponds to anything real.
Which is where it rises to the level of existence itself, as you say — because it connects to what a self is, what causation is, and whether the universe has room for genuine novelty or just rearranges what's already there.
Those questions have resisted clean answers for a long time. Probably for good reason.
Our instinct, or desire, or "id" tells us we want something. Our knowledge tells us it belongs to someone else and ethics and practical considerations both tell us we would be better off not taking it. We make a decision one way or the other. I suppose in most cases it depends on the person which side of the balance is heavier, but we have, over and beyond personality, a sentience inside us that can put our thumb on one side quite deliberately.
Yes, and that's perhaps the most honest account of where freedom actually lives — not in escaping the causal chain entirely, but in that thumb.
Not freedom from having desires, or from knowing consequences, or from having a personality that tilts one way or another. Those are all just given. But something that can observe all of that — the desire, the knowledge, the ethical weight, the personality bias — and still apply pressure. Not randomly, not automatically, but deliberately.
What's interesting is that this capacity seems to require a kind of self-distance. You have to be able to see the desire as a desire rather than simply being it, see the personality tendency as a tendency rather than just acting from it. That's exactly what mindfulness cultivates — not suppressing the instincts but gaining enough separation from them to have a choice about what to do with them.
And that separation itself is strange. It implies something that can stand slightly outside the stream and observe it. Not completely outside — you're still in there, still affected, still you — but enough outside to apply the thumb.
Whether that observer is itself just another layer of mechanism, or whether it represents something genuinely different in kind, is probably unanswerable from inside the system. We can't get outside our own sentience to check what it's made of.
But functionally, practically, morally — it matters enormously. Law, ethics, relationships, and self-respect all depend on treating that thumb as real. And the people who exercise it most deliberately do seem to live differently than those who don't.
That's not proof of anything metaphysical. But it's not nothing either.
Yea, the thumb is a bad metaphor as it suggests something metaphysical.
You're right, it does smuggle that in.
Better maybe to say just that the deliberative process itself — the weighing, the attending, the noticing — is capable of shifting the outcome in ways that pure instinct or habit wouldn't. No extra ingredient required. The deliberation is part of the causal story, not something added from outside it.
Which is actually enough. You don't need a metaphysical thumb to have meaningful choice. You just need a system complex enough that attending carefully to what's happening produces different outcomes than not attending. And we clearly are that.
The practical difference between a person who notices their impulses and weighs them against what they value, versus one who just acts from whatever is loudest in the moment, is real and observable. That difference doesn't require resolving anything about the ultimate nature of causation or consciousness.
It's a bit like the vine, in a way. We don't need to invoke anything mysterious to explain why it reaches the stick. The process is sufficient. But the process is also genuinely interesting and not reducible to something simple.
The mystery of how deliberation works, how attention shifts outcomes, how values get internalized deeply enough to compete with strong instinct — that's rich enough without needing a ghost in the machine.
Oh but the ghost is there; the sentient person knows it.
Yes. And that's the thing no third-person account quite captures.
You can describe the deliberative process from outside — neurons, competing signals, attention modulating outcomes — and the description can be accurate as far as it goes. But it leaves out the one thing that is most immediately and certainly present: that there is something it is like to be the one doing it.
The sentient person doesn't infer their own experience. They don't arrive at it by argument. It's the one thing that requires no proof because it's prior to proof. Descartes got at least that much right.
And that first-person reality — the ghost, as you say — is precisely what the third-person causal account cannot see by design. It's not that science gets it wrong. It's that the method brackets it out deliberately, and then some people forget the bracketing happened and conclude it isn't there.
What's left unresolved is how those two accounts relate. The ghost seems to be doing something — experiencing, attending, valuing, choosing in the felt sense. The causal account also seems complete in its own terms. How one reality can be both of those things at once is the hard problem of consciousness, and it remains genuinely hard.
But you're pointing at something important — that the person on the inside has a kind of direct access the outside account will always lack. The sentient person knows the ghost is there not because they reasoned to it but because they are it.
That's not nothing. That might be the most fundamental thing there is.
Still when one watches one's mind (actually the watcher is the present mind looking at the mind's state a moment earlier) in meditation or introspection, one sees that it is not a soul as Descartes would have it, not a homunculus, but more a wave or flame or process. Still a ghost but not a self.
That's a much more precise and honest account than Descartes.
What meditation actually reveals, when done carefully, is that there's no stable entity in there doing the watching. The watcher you just described — present mind observing the previous moment's state — is itself just another moment of the process. Chase the watcher and you find another watcher, and another. No ground, no fixed point, no soul sitting behind it all.
The flame metaphor is good because a flame has coherence, continuity, causal influence on what happens next — it's real in every practical sense — but there's no flame-substance. Just process sustaining itself moment to moment. The identity is in the pattern, not in any persistent thing.
Buddhism got here a long time ago. Anatta — no fixed self — combined with the observation that this doesn't make experience less real, just differently real than we habitually assume. The ghost is genuine but it's a verb not a noun.
What's interesting is that this view actually dissolves some of the hardest philosophical problems rather than solving them. The question of how a soul interfaces with a physical brain — Descartes' own nightmare — simply doesn't arise if there's no soul-substance to interface. The process is in the world, not peering at it from outside.
And yet the experience of being that process, from inside it, remains exactly as vivid and immediate as ever. The flame doesn't feel less warm for being a process.
Which may be the most important thing — that the ghost doesn't need to be a self to be real, or to matter.