|
Icons
of Evolution
by
Jonathan Wells
Click here
to return to book details
Chapter
1/Introduction
Science
is the search for the truth, wrote chemist
Linus Pauling, winner of two Nobel prizes. Bruce
Alberts, current president of the U. S. National
Academy of Sciences, agrees. Science and
lies cannot coexist, said Alberts in May
2000, quoting Israeli statesman Shimon Peres.
You dont have a scientific lie, and
you cannot lie scientifically. Science is basically
the search of truth.
For
most people, the opposite of science is myth.
A myth is a story that may fulfill a subjective
need, or reveal something profound about the human
psyche, but as commonly used it is not an account
of objective reality. Most scientists wince,
writes former Science editor Roger Lewin, when
the word myth is attached to what
they see as a pursuit of the truth. Of course,
science has mythical elements, because all human
enterprises do. But scientists are right to wince
when their pronouncements are called myths, because
their goal as scientists is to minimize subjective
storytelling and maximize objective truth.
Truth-seeking
is not only noble, but also enormously useful.
By providing us with the closest thing we have
to a true understanding of the natural world,
science enables us to live safer, healthier and
more productive lives. If science werent
the search for truth, our bridges wouldnt
support the weight we put on them, our lives wouldnt
be as long as they are, and modern technological
civilization wouldnt exist.
Storytelling
is a valuable enterprise, too. Without stories,
we would have no culture. But we do not call on
storytellers to build bridges or perform surgery.
For such tasks, we prefer people who have disciplined
themselves to understand the realities of steel
or flesh.
The
discipline of science
How
do scientists discipline themselves to understand
the natural world? Philosophers of science have
answered this question in a variety of ways, but
one thing is clear: Any theory that purports to
be scientific must somehow, at some point, be
compared with observations or experiments. According
to a 1998 booklet on science teaching issued by
the National Academy of Sciences, it is
the nature of science to test and retest explanations
against the natural world.
Theories
that survive repeated testing may be tentatively
regarded as true statements about the world. But
if there is persistent conflict between theory
and evidence, the former must yield to the latter.
As seventeenth-century philosopher of science
Francis Bacon put it, we must obey Nature in order
to command her. When science fails to obey nature,
bridges collapse and patients die on the operating
table.
Testing
theories against the evidence never ends. The
National Academys booklet correctly states
that all scientific knowledge is, in principle,
subject to change as new evidence becomes available.
It doesnt matter how long a theory has been
held, or how many scientists currently believe
it. If contradictory evidence turns up, the theory
must be reevaluated or even abandoned. Otherwise
it is not science, but myth.
To
ensure that theories are tested objectively and
do not become subjective myths, the testing must
be public rather than private. This process
of public scrutiny, according to the National
Academys booklet, is an essential
part of science. It works to eliminate individual
bias and subjectivity, because others must also
be able to determine whether a proposed explanation
is consistent with the available evidence.
Within
the scientific community, this process is called
peer review. Some scientific claims
are so narrowly technical that they can be properly
evaluated only by specialists. In such cases,
the peers are a handful of experts.
In a surprising number of instances, however,
the average person is probably as competent to
make a judgment as the most highly trained scientist.
If a theory of gravity predicts that heavy objects
will fall upwards, it doesnt take an astrophysicist
to see that the theory is wrong. And if a picture
of an embryo doesnt look like the real thing,
it doesnt take an embryologist to see that
the picture is false.
So
an average person with access to the evidence
should be able to understand and evaluate many
scientific claims. The National Academys
booklet acknowledged this by opening with Thomas
Jeffersons call for the diffusion
of knowledge among the people. No other sure foundation
can be devised for the preservation of freedom
and happiness. The booklet continued: Jefferson
saw clearly what has become increasingly evident
since then: the fortunes of a nation rest on the
ability of its citizens to understand and use
information about the world around them.
U.
S. District Judge James Graham affirmed this Jeffersonian
wisdom in an Ohio newspaper column in May 2000.
Graham wrote: Science is not an inscrutable
priesthood. Any person of reasonable intelligence
should, with some diligence, be able to understand
and critically evaluate a scientific theory.
Both
the National Academys booklet and Judge
Grahams newspaper column were written in
the context of the present controversy over evolution.
But the former was written to defend Darwins
theory, while the latter was written to defend
some of its critics. In other words, defenders
as well as critics of Darwinian evolution are
appealing to the intelligence and wisdom of the
American people to resolve the controversy.
This
book was written in the conviction that scientific
theories in general, and Darwinian evolution in
particular, can be evaluated by any intelligent
person with access to the evidence. But before
looking at the evidence for evolution, we must
know what evolution is.
What
is evolution?
Biological
evolution is the theory that all living things
are modified descendants of a common ancestor
that lived in the distant past. It claims that
you and I are descendants of ape-like ancestors,
and that they in turn came from still more primitive
animals.
This
is the primary meaning of evolution
among biologists. Biological evolution,
according to the National Academys booklet,
explains that living things share common
ancestors. Over time, evolutionary change gives
rise to new species. Darwin called this process
descent with modification, and it
remains a good definition of biological evolution
today.
For
Charles Darwin, descent with modification was
the origin of all living things after the first
organisms. He wrote in The Origin of Species:
I view all beings not as special creations,
but as the lineal descendants of some few beings
that lived in the distant past. The reason living
things are now so different from each other, Darwin
believed, is that they have been modified by natural
selection, or survival of the fittest: I
am convinced that Natural Selection has been the
most important, but not the exclusive, means of
modification.
When
proponents of Darwins theory are responding
to critics, they sometimes claim that evolution
means simply change over time. But this is clearly
an evasion. No rational person denies the reality
of change, and we did not need Charles Darwin
to convince us of it. If evolution
meant only this, it would be utterly uncontroversial.
Nobody believes that biological evolution is simply
change over time.
Only
slightly less evasive is the statement that descent
with modification occurs. Of course it does, because
all organisms within a single species are related
through descent with modification. We see this
in our own families, and plant and animal breeders
see it in their work. But this still misses the
point.
No
one doubts that descent with modification occurs
in the course of ordinary biological reproduction.
The question is whether descent with modification
accounts for the origin of new species-in fact,
of every species. Like change over time, descent
with modification within a species is utterly
uncontroversial. But Darwinian evolution claims
much more. In particular, it claims that descent
with modification explains the origin and diversification
of all living things.
The
only way anyone can determine whether this claim
is true is by comparing it with observations or
experiments. Like all other scientific theories,
Darwinian evolution must be continually compared
with the evidence. If it does not fit the evidence,
it must be reevaluated or abandoned-otherwise
it is not science, but myth.
Evidence for evolution
When
asked to list the evidence for Darwinian evolution,
most people-including most biologists-give the
same set of examples, because all of them learned
biology from the same few textbooks. The most
common examples are:
- a
laboratory flask containing a simulation of
the Earths primitive atmosphere, in which
electric sparks produce the chemical building-blocks
of living cells;
-
the evolutionary tree of life, reconstructed
from a large and growing body of fossil and
molecular evidence;
-
similar bone structures in a bats wing,
a porpoises flipper, a horses leg,
and a human hand that indicate their evolutionary
origin in a common ancestor;
-
pictures of similarities in early embryos showing
that amphibians, reptiles, birds and human beings
are all descended from a fish-like animal;
-
Archaeopteryx, a fossil bird with teeth in its
jaws and claws on its wings, the missing link
between ancient reptiles and modern birds;
-
peppered moths on tree trunks, showing how camouflage
and predatory birds produced the most famous
example of evolution by natural selection;
-
Darwins finches on the Galápagos
Islands, thirteen separate species that diverged
from one when natural selection produced differences
in their beaks, and that inspired Darwin to
formulate his theory of evolution;
-
fruit flies with an extra pair of wings, showing
that genetic mutations can provide the raw materials
for evolution;
-
a branching-tree pattern of horse fossils that
refutes the old-fashioned idea that evolution
was directed; and
-
drawings of ape-like creatures evolving into
humans, showing that we are just animals and
that our existence is merely a by-product of
purposeless natural causes.
These
examples are so frequently used as evidence for
Darwins theory that most of them have been
called icons of evolution. Yet all
of them, in one way or another, misrepresent the
truth.
Science or myth?
Some
of these icons of evolution present assumptions
or hypotheses as though they were observed facts;
in Stephen Jay Goulds words, they are incarnations
of concepts masquerading as neutral descriptions
of nature. Others conceal raging controversies
among biologists that have far-reaching implications
for evolutionary theory. Worst of all, some are
directly contrary to well-established scientific
evidence.
Most
biologists are unaware of these problems. Indeed,
most biologists work in fields far removed from
evolutionary biology. Most of what they know about
evolution, they learned from biology textbooks
and the same magazine articles and television
documentaries that are seen by the general public.
But the textbooks and popular presentations rely
primarily on the icons of evolution, so as far
as many biologists are concerned the icons are
the evidence for evolution.
Some
biologists are aware of difficulties with a particular
icon because it distorts the evidence in their
own field. When they read the scientific literature
in their specialty, they can see that the icon
is misleading or downright false. But they may
feel that this is just an isolated problem, especially
when they are assured that Darwins theory
is supported by overwhelming evidence from other
fields. If they believe in the fundamental correctness
of Darwinian evolution, they may set aside their
misgivings about the particular icon they know
something about.
On
the other hand, if they voice their misgivings
they may find it difficult to gain a hearing among
their colleagues, because (as we shall see) criticizing
Darwinian evolution is extremely unpopular among
English-speaking biologists. This may be why the
problems with the icons of evolution are not more
widely known. And this is why many biologists
will be just as surprised as the general public
to learn how serious and widespread those problems
are.
The following chapters compare the icons of evolution
with published scientific evidence, and reveal
that much of what we teach about evolution is
wrong. This fact raises troubling questions about
the status of Darwinian evolution. If the icons
of evolution are supposed to be our best evidence
for Darwins theory, and all of them are
false or misleading, what does that tell us about
the theory? Is it science, or myth?
Price:
$21.95 - Click
here to order: 
Click here to return
to book details
|