Embryogenesis and the Unfolding of Developmental Potential
Having reframed genes as structured biological potential—and epigenetics as one of the systems through which that potential is contextually instantiated—we now turn to perhaps the most dramatic theatre of biological actualisation: development. In the unfolding of an organism from a single cell to a complex multicellular individual, we see biological potential not only actualised, but orchestrated, differentiated, and individuated across time and space.
This is the domain of embryogenesis—and it powerfully affirms our model of constrained potential realised in instance.
From Zygote to Organism: A Developmental Trajectory
Every multicellular organism begins as a single cell. That cell contains the full developmental potential of the organism—yet almost nothing of the organism’s structure has been actualised. What unfolds is not a simple execution of a program, but a dynamic cascade of instantiations, each shaped by:
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Epigenetic constraints, which modulate access to genetic potential.
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Local environments, including the chemical gradients and physical conditions of the embryonic context.
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Intercellular signalling, through which developing cells co-regulate one another's differentiation.
Thus, development is not the expression of a code, but the orchestration of a system—a process that is at once internally constrained and environmentally shaped.
Individuation through Differentiation
Each stage of development increases individuation. The fertilised egg is pluripotent, containing the potential for any cell type. But as development proceeds, this potential is progressively constrained. Cells become muscle, skin, neurones—not because they lose genetic information, but because their epigenetic landscape and relational positioning narrows what is possible in each local context.
In this sense:
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Development is individuation through instantiation. Each differentiation is a move from general potential toward specific actualisation.
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The organism as a whole is not simply a sum of cells, but a self-organising instantiation of its own potential.
Crucially, individuation happens within a system—the developing embryo. Each part's identity is shaped not only by its internal potential, but by its relation to the whole.
Developmental Potential Is Not Destiny
It is tempting to think of developmental potential as deterministic—but this is an artefact of the replicator metaphor. In reality, developmental pathways are robust but flexible. They are regulated through feedback, sensitive to environmental cues, and open to multiple pathways of actualisation.
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Temperature can affect sex determination in reptiles.
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Nutritional signals can shift metabolic development.
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In humans, early relational environments can shape neurobiological development well into adulthood.
Such variability is not a bug in the system—it is part of its design. Developmental potential is not a script, but a field of affordances, structured yet responsive.
The developing organism is not only making a body; it is making a self—an individuated system capable of perception, action, and interaction.
Development Is Ongoing
Embryogenesis may seem like a contained process, but in truth, development never ends. The same principles that guide early development continue throughout life:
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Neural plasticity enables ongoing individuation of experience.
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Immune development continues into adulthood, shaped by environmental exposure.
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Social and symbolic environments modulate biological systems across the lifespan.
Thus, the developmental potential of an organism is not confined to the womb. It is lifelong—and always embedded in contexts of meaning.
In this light, development is not merely biological engineering—it is living semiosis: the ongoing instantiation of a structured potential shaped by internal dynamics, environmental contexts, and the organism's own unfolding history.