THE CASE AGAINST INTELLIGENT DESIGN
THE FAITH THAT DARE NOT SPEAK ITS NAME
BY PROF. JERRY COYNE
9th September 2005
AUTHOR NAME HERE
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JERRY COYNE is a professor in the department
of ecology and evolution at the University
of Chicago, where he works on diverse areas
of evolutionary genetics. The main focus
of his laboratory is on the original problem
raised by Darwin — the origin of species — and on understanding this process through
the genetic patterns it produces. He is also
interested speciation, ecological and evolutionary
genetics, particularly if they involve Drosophila.
He is the author (with H. Allen Orr)
of Speciation.
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In the end, many Americans may still reject
evolution, finding the creationist alternative
psychologically more comfortable. But emotion
should be distinguished from thought, and
a "comfort level" should not affect
what is taught in the science classroom.
As Judge Overton wrote in his magisterial
decision striking down Arkansas Act 590,
which mandated equal classroom time for "scientific
creationism": The application and content
of First Amendment principles are not determined
by public opinion polls or by a majority
vote. Whether the proponents of Act 590 constitute
the majority or the minority is quite irrelevant
under a constitutional system of government.
No group, no matter how large or small, may
use the organs of government, of which the
public schools are the most conspicuous and
influential, to foist its religious beliefs
on others.
THE CASE AGAINST INTELLIGENT DESIGN The Faith
That Dare Not Speak Its Name
JERRY COYNE: Exactly eighty years after the
Scopes "monkey trial" in Dayton,
Tennessee, history is about to repeat itself.
In a courtroom in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
in late September, scientists and creationists
will square off about whether and how high
school students in Dover, Pennsylvania will
learn about biological evolution. One would
have assumed that these battles were over,
but that is to underestimate the fury (and
the ingenuity) of creationists scorned.
The Scopes trial of our day - Kitzmiller,
et al v. Dover Area School District et al
- began innocuously. In the spring of 2004,
the district's textbook review committee
recommended that a new commercial text replace
the outdated biology book. At a school board
meeting in June, William Buckingham, the
chair of the board's curriculum committee,
complained that the proposed replacement
book was "laced with Darwinism."
After challenging the audience to trace its
roots back to a monkey, he suggested that
a more suitable textbook would include biblical
theories of creation. When asked whether
this might offend those of other faiths,
Buckingham replied, "This country wasn't
founded on Muslim beliefs or evolution. This
country was founded on Christianity and our
students should be taught as such."
Defending his views a week later, Buckingham
reportedly pleaded: "Two thousand years
ago, someone died on a cross. Can't someone
take a stand for him?" And he added:
"Nowhere in the Constitution does it
call for a separation of church and state."
After a summer of heated but inconclusive
wrangling, on October 18, 2004 the Dover
school board passed, by a vote of six to
three, a resolution that read: "Students
will be made aware of gaps/problems in Darwin's
theory and of other theories of evolution
including, but not limited to, intelligent
design. Note: Origins of Life is not taught."
A month later, the Dover school district
issued a press release revealing how the
alternative of "intelligent design"
was to be presented. Before starting to teach
evolution, biology teachers were to read
their ninth-grade students a statement, which
included the following language:
The Pennsylvania Academic Standards require
students to learn about Darwin's Theory of
Evolution and eventually to take a standardized
test of which evolution is a part.
Because Darwin's Theory is a theory, it continues
to be tested as new evidence is discovered.
The Theory is not a fact. Gaps in the Theory
exist for which there is no evidence....
Intelligent design is an explanation of the
origin of life that differs from Darwin's
view. The reference book, Of Pandas and People
, is available for students to see if they
would like to explore this view in an effort
to gain an understanding of what intelligent
design actually involves. As is true with
any theory, students are encouraged to keep
an open mind.
The results were dramatic but predictable.
Two school board members resigned. All eight
science teachers at Dover High School sent
a letter to the school superintendent pointing
out that "intelligent design is not
science. It is not biology. It is not an
accepted scientific theory." The biology
teachers asked to be excused from reading
the statement, claiming that to do so would
"knowingly and intentionally misrepresent
subject matter or curriculum," a violation
of their code of professional standards.
And so, in January of this year, all ninth-grade
biology classes were visited by the assistant
superintendent himself, who read the mandated
disclaimer while the teachers and a few students
left the room.
Inevitably, the controversy went to the courts.
Eleven Dover parents filed suit against the
school district and its board of directors,
asking that the "intelligent design"
policy be rescinded for fostering "excessive
entanglement of government and religion,
coerced religious instruction, and an endorsement
by the state of religion over non-religion
and of one religious viewpoint over others."
The plaintiffs are represented by the Philadelphia
law firm of Pepper Hamilton, the Pennsylvania
American Civil Liberties Union, and Americans
United for Separation of Church and State;
the defendants, by the Thomas More Law Center,
a conservative Christian organization in
Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Why all the fuss about a seemingly inoffensive
statement? Who could possibly object to students
"keep[ing] an open mind" and examining
a respectable-sounding alternative to evolution?
Isn't science about testing theories against
each other? The furor makes sense only in
light of the tortuous history of creationism
in America. Since it arose after World War
I, Christian fundamentalist creationism has
undergone its own evolution, taking on newer
forms after absorbing repeated blows from
the courts. "Intelligent design,"
as I will show, is merely the latest incarnation
of the biblical creationism espoused by William
Jennings Bryan in Dayton. Far from a respectable
scientific alternative to evolution, it is
a clever attempt to sneak religion, cloaked
in the guise of science, into the public
schools.
The journey from Dayton to Dover was marked
by a series of legal verdicts, only one of
which, the Scopes trial, favored creationism.
In 1925, John Scopes, a high school teacher,
was convicted of violating Tennessee's Butler
Act, which prohibited the teaching of "any
theory that denies the Story of Divine Creation
of Man as taught in the Bible, and to teach
instead that man has descended from a lower
order of animal." The verdict was reversed
on a technicality (the judge, instead of
the jury, levied the $100 fine), so the case
was never appealed. In the wake of Scopes,
anti-evolution laws were passed in Mississippi
and Arkansas, adding to those passed by Florida
and Oklahoma in 1923. Although these laws
were rarely enforced, evolution nonetheless
quickly disappeared from most high school
biology textbooks because publishers feared
losing sales in the South, where anti-evolution
sentiment ran high.
In 1957, the situation changed. With the
launch of Sputnik, Americans awoke to find
that a scientifically advanced Soviet Union
had beaten the United States into space.
This spurred rapid revisions of science textbooks,
some emphasizing biological evolution. But
the anti-evolution statutes were still in
force, and so some teachers using newer books
were violating the law. One of these teachers,
Susan Epperson, brought suit against the
state of Arkansas for violating the Establishment
Clause. She won the right to teach evolution,
and Epperson v. Arkansas was upheld by the
United States Supreme Court in 1968, only
a year after Tennessee finally rescinded
the Butler Act. Finally it was legal to teach
evolution everywhere in America.
The opponents of evolution proceeded to re-think
their strategy, deciding that if they could
not beat scientists, they would join them.
They thus recast themselves as "scientific
creationists," proposing an ostensibly
non-religious alternative to the theory of
evolution that might be acceptable in the
classroom. But the empirical claims of scientific
creationism ó that the Earth is young (6,000
to 10,000 years old), that all species were
created suddenly and simultaneously, that
mass extinctions were caused by a great worldwide
flood ó bore a suspicious resemblance to
creation stories in the Bible. This strategy
was devised largely by Henry Morris, an engineering
professor who headed the influential Institute
for Creation Research in San Diego and helped
to write the Scientific Creationism. The
book came in two versions: one purged of
religious references for the public schools,
the other containing a scriptural appendix
explaining that the science came from interpreting
the Bible literally.
Scientific creationism proved a bust for
two reasons. First, the "science"
was ludicrously wrong. We have known for
a long time that the Earth is 4.6 billion
years old (the
6,000- to 10,000-year claim comes from biblical
statements, including toting up the number
of "begats") and that species were
not created suddenly or simultaneously (not
only do most species go extinct, but various
groups appear at different times in the fossil
record), and we have ample evidence for species'
changing over time, as well as for fossils
that illustrate large morphological transformations.
Most risible was Scientific Creationism's
struggle to explain the geological record
as a result of a great flood: according to
its account, "primitive" organisms
such as fish would be found in the lowest
layers, while mammals and more "advanced"
species appeared in higher layers because
they climbed hills and mountains to escape
the rising waters. Why dolphins are found
in the upper strata with other mammals is
one of many facts that this ludicrous fantasy
fails to explain.
Scientific creationism also came to grief
because its advocates did not adequately
hide its religious underpinnings. In 1981,
the Arkansas legislature passed an "equal
time" bill mandating balanced treatment
for "evolution science" and "creation
science" in the classroom. The bill
was quickly challenged in federal court by
a group of religious and scientific plaintiffs
led by a Methodist minister named William
McLean. The defense was easily outgunned,
with Judge William Overton quickly spotting
biblical literalism underlying the scientific-creationist
arguments. In a landmark opinion (and a masterpiece
of legal argument), Overton ruled in McLean
v. Arkansas Board of Education that the balanced-treatment
act was unconstitutional, asserting that
it violated the Establishment Clause in three
ways: it lacked a secular legislative purpose,
its primary effect was to advance religion,
and it fostered excessive government entanglement
with religion.
McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education began
a string of legal setbacks for scientific
creationists. Five years later, in Edwards
v. Aguillard, the Supreme Court held that
Louisiana's "Creationism Act" ó
an act that required the teaching of evolution
in public schools to be balanced by instruction
in "creation science" ó was unconstitutional.
In the last two decades, federal courts have
also used the First Amendment to allow schools
to prohibit teaching creationism and to ban
school districts from requiring teachers
to read evolution disclaimers similar to
the one used in Dover, Pennsylvania. To get
around these rulings, schools in Alabama,
Arkansas, and Georgia began pasting warning
stickers in biology textbooks, as if learning
about evolution could endanger one's mental
health. A recent specimen from Cobb County,
Georgia reads: "This textbook contains
material on evolution. Evolution is a theory,
not a fact, regarding the origin of living
things. This material should be approached
with an open mind, studied carefully and
critically considered."
To laypeople - particularly those unfamiliar
with the scientific status of evolution,
which is actually a theory and a fact - the
phrasing may seem harmless. But in 2005 a
federal judge ordered the stickers removed.
By singling out evolution as uniquely controversial
among scientific theories, the stickers catered
to religious biases and thus violated the
First Amendment.
But the creationists did not despair. They
are animated, after all, by faith. And they
are very resourceful. They came up with intelligent
design.
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II.
Intelligent design, or ID, is the latest
pseudoscientific incarnation of religious
creationism, cleverly crafted by a new group
of enthusiasts to circumvent recent legal
restrictions. ID comes in two parts. The
first is a simple critique of evolutionary
theory, to the effect that Darwinism, as
an explanation of the origin, the development,
and the diversity of life, is fatally flawed.
The second is the assertion that the major
features of life are best understood as the
result of creation by a supernatural intelligent
designer. To understand ID, then, we must
first understand modern evolutionary theory
(often called "neo-Darwinism" to
take into account post-Darwinian modifications).
It is important to realize at the outset
that evolution is not "just a theory."
It is, again, a theory and a fact. Although
non-scientists often equate "theory"
with "hunch" or "wild guess,"
the Oxford English Dictionary defines a scientific
theory as "a scheme or system of ideas
or statements held as an explanation or account
of a group of facts or phenomena; a hypothesis
that has been confirmed or established by
observation or experiment, and is propounded
or accepted as accounting for the known facts."
In science, a theory is a convincing explanation
for a diversity of data from nature. Thus
scientists speak of "atomic theory"
and "gravitational theory" as explanations
for the properties of matter and the mutual
attraction of physical bodies. It makes as
little sense to doubt the factuality of evolution
as to doubt the factuality of gravity.
Neo-Darwinian theory is not one proposition
but several. The first proposition is that
populations of organisms have evolved. (Darwin,
who used the word "evolved" only
once in On the Origin of Species, called
this principle "descent with modification.")
That is, the species on earth today are the
descendants of other species that lived earlier,
and the change in these lineages has been
gradual, taking thousands to millions of
years. Humans, for example, evolved from
distinctly different organisms that had smaller
brains and probably lived in trees.
The second proposition is that new forms
of life are continually generated by the
splitting of a single lineage into two or
more lineages. This is known as "speciation."
About five million years ago, a species of
primates split into two distinct lineages:
one leading to modern chimpanzees and the
other to modern humans. And this ancestral
primate itself shared a common ancestor with
earlier primates, which in turn shared a
common ancestor with other mammals. The earlier
ancestor of all mammals shared an even earlier
ancestor with reptiles, and so on back to
the origin of life. Such successive splitting
yields the common metaphor of an evolutionary
"tree of life," whose root was
the first species to arise and whose twigs
are the millions of living species. Any two
extant species share a common ancestor, which
can in principle be found by tracing that
pair of twigs back through the branches to
the node where they meet. (Extinction, of
course, has pruned some branches ó pterodactyls,
for example ó which represent groups that
died off without descendants.) We are more
closely related to chimpanzees than to orangutans
because our common ancestor with these primates
lived five million versus ten million years
ago, respectively. (It is important to note
that although we share a common ancestor
with apes, we did not evolve from living
apes, but from apelike species that no longer
exist. Similarly, I am related to my cousin,
but the ancestors we share are two extinct
grandparents.)
The third proposition is that most (though
not all) of evolutionary change is probably
driven by natural selection: individuals
carrying genes that better suit them to the
current environment leave more offspring
than individuals carrying genes that make
them less adapted. Over time, the genetic
composition of a population changes, improving
its "fit" to the environment. This
increasing fit is what gives organisms the
appearance of design, although, as we shall
see, the "design" can be flawed.
These three propositions were first articulated
in 1859 by Darwin in On the Origin of Species,
and they have not changed substantially,
although they have been refined and supplemented
by modern work. But Darwin did not propose
these ideas as pure "theory"; he
also provided voluminous and convincing evidence
for them. The weight of this evidence was
so overwhelming that it crushed creationism.
Within fifteen years, nearly all biologists,
previously adherents of "natural theology,"
abandoned that view and accepted Darwin's
first two propositions. Broad acceptance
of natural selection came much later, around
1930.
The overwhelming evidence for evolution can
be found in many books (and on many websites).
Here I wish to present just a few observations
that not only support the neo-Darwinist account,
but in so doing refute the alternative theory
of creationism ó that God specially created
organisms and their attributes. Given the
similarity between the claims of intelligent
design and creationism, it is not surprising
that these observations also refute the major
tenets of ID.
The fossil record is the most obvious place
to search for evidence of evolution. Although
the record was sparse in Darwin's time, there
were already findings that suggested evolution.
The living armadillos of South America bore
a striking resemblance to fossil glyptodonts,
extinct armored mammals whose fossils occurred
in the same area. This suggested that glyptodonts
and armadillos shared a common South American
ancestry. And the record clearly displayed
changes in the forms of life existing over
large spans of time, with the deepest and
oldest sediments showing marine invertebrates,
with fishes appearing much later, and still
later amphibians, reptiles, and mammals (along
with the persistence of some groups found
in earlier stages). This sequence of change
was in fact established by creationist geologists
long before Darwin, and was often thought
to reflect hundreds of acts of divine creation.
(This does not exactly comport with the account
given in Genesis.)
Yet evolution predicts not just successions
of forms, but also genetic lineages from
ancestors to descendants. The absence of
such transitional series in the fossil record
bothered Darwin, who called this "the
most obvious and serious objection that can
be urged against the theory." (He attributed
the missing links, quite reasonably, to the
imperfection of the fossil record and the
dearth of paleontological collections.) But
this objection is no longer valid. Since
1859, paleontologists have turned up Darwin's
missing evidence: fossils in profusion, with
many sequences showing evolutionary change.
In large and small organisms, we can trace,
through successive layers of the fossil record,
evolutionary changes occurring in lineages.
Diatoms get bigger, clamshells get ribbier,
horses get larger and toothier, and the human
lineage evolves bigger brains, smaller teeth,
and increased efficiency at bipedal walking.
Moreover, we now have transitional forms
connecting major groups of organisms, including
fish with tetrapods, dinosaurs with birds,
reptiles with mammals, and land mammals with
whales. Darwin predicted that such forms
would be found, and their discovery vindicated
him fully. It also destroys the creationist
notion that species were created in their
present form and thereafter remained unchanged.
Darwin's second line of evidence comprised
the developmental and structural remnants
of past ancestry that we find in living species
ó those features that Stephen Jay Gould called
"the senseless signs of history."
Examples are numerous. Both birds and toothless
anteaters develop tooth buds as embryos,
but the teeth are aborted and never erupt;
the buds are the remnants of the teeth of
the reptilian ancestor of birds and the toothed
ancestor of anteaters. The flightless kiwi
bird of New Zealand, familiar from shoe-polish
cans, has tiny vestigial wings hidden under
its feathers; they are completely useless,
but they attest to the fact that kiwis, like
all flightless birds, evolved from flying
ancestors. Some cave animals, descended from
sighted ancestors that invaded caves, have
rudimentary eyes that cannot see; the eyes
degenerated after they were no longer needed.
A creator, especially an intelligent one,
would not bestow useless tooth buds, wings,
or eyes on large numbers of species.
The human body is also a palimpsest of our
ancestry. Our appendix is the vestigial remnant
of an intestinal pouch used to ferment the
hard-to-digest plant diets of our ancestors.
(Orangutans and grazing animals have a large
hollow appendix instead of the tiny, wormlike
one that we possess.) An appendix is simply
a bad thing to have. It is certainly not
the product of intelligent design: how many
humans died of appendicitis before surgery
was invented? And consider also lanugo. Five
months after conception, human fetuses grow
a thin coat of hair, called lanugo, all over
their bodies. It does not seem useful ó after
all, it is a comfortable 98.6 degrees in
utero ó and the hair is usually shed shortly
before birth. The feature makes sense only
as an evolutionary remnant of our primate
ancestry; fetal apes also grow such a coat,
but they do not shed it.
Recent studies of the human genome provide
more evidence that we were not created ex
nihilo. Our genome is a veritable Gemisch
of non-functional DNA, including many inactive
"pseudogenes" that were functional
in our ancestors. Why do humans, unlike most
mammals, require vitamin C in our diet? Because
primates cannot synthesize this essential
nutrient from simpler chemicals. Yet we still
carry all the genes for synthesizing vitamin
C. The gene used for the last step in this
pathway was inactivated by mutations forty
million years ago, probably because it was
unnecessary in fruit-eating primates. But
it still sits in our DNA, one of many useless
remnants testifying to our evolutionary ancestry.
Darwin's third line of evidence came from
biogeography, the study of the geographic
distribution of plants and animals. I have
already mentioned what Darwin called his
"Law of Succession": living organisms
in an area most closely resemble fossils
found in the same location. This implies
that the former evolved from the latter.
But Darwin found his strongest evidence on
"oceanic islands" ó those islands,
such as Hawaii and the Gal·pagos, that were
never connected to continents but arose,
bereft of life, from beneath the sea.
What struck Darwin about oceanic islands
ó as opposed to continents or "continental
islands" such as Great Britain, which
were once connected to continents ó was the
bizarre nature of their flora and fauna.
Oceanic islands are simply missing or impoverished
in many types of animals. Hawaii has no native
mammals, reptiles, or amphibians. These animals,
as well as freshwater fish, are also missing
on St. Helena, a remote oceanic island in
the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean. It
seems that the intelligent designer forgot
to stock oceanic (but not continental!) islands
with a sufficient variety of animals. One
might respond that this was a strategy of
the creator, as those organisms might not
survive on islands. But this objection fails,
because such animals often do spectacularly
well when introduced by humans. Hawaii has
been overrun by the introduced cane toad
and mongoose, to the detriment of its native
fauna.
Strikingly, the native groups that are present
on these islands ó mainly plants, insects,
and birds ó are present in profusion, consisting
of clusters of numerous similar species.
The Gal·pagos archipelago harbors twenty-three
species of land birds, of which fourteen
species are finches. Nowhere else in the
world will you find an area in which two-thirds
of the birds are finches. Hawaii has similar
"radiations" of fruit flies and
silversword plants, while St. Helena is overloaded
with ferns and weevils. Compared with continents
or continental islands, then, oceanic islands
have unbalanced flora and fauna, lacking
many familiar groups but having an over-representation
of some species.
Moreover, the animals and the plants inhabiting
oceanic islands bear the greatest similarity
to species found on the nearest mainland.
As Darwin noted when describing the species
of the Gal·pagos, this similarity occurs
despite a great difference in habitat, a
fact militating against creationism:
Why should the species which are supposed
to have been created in the Gal·pagos Archipelago,
and nowhere else, bear so plainly the stamp
of affinity to those created in America?
There is nothing in the conditions of life,
in the geological nature of the islands,
in their height or climate, or in the proportions
in which the several classes are associated
together, which resembles closely the conditions
of the South American coast: in fact there
is a considerable dissimilarity in all these
respects.
As the final peg in Darwin's biogeographic
argument, he noted that the kinds of organisms
commonly found on oceanic islands ó birds,
plants, and insects ó are those that can
easily get there. Insects and birds can fly
to islands (or be blown there by winds),
and the seeds of plants can be transported
by winds or ocean currents, or in the stomachs
of birds. Hawaii may have no native terrestrial
mammals, but the islands do harbor one native
aquatic mammal, the monk seal, and one native
flying mammal, the hoary bat. In a direct
challenge to creationists (and now also to
advocates of ID), Darwin posed this rhetorical
question:
Though terrestrial mammals do not occur on
oceanic islands, aerial mammals do occur
on almost every island. New Zealand possesses
two bats found nowhere else in the world:
Norfolk Island, the Viti Archipelago, the
Bonin Islands, the Caroline and Marianne
Archipelagoes, and Mauritius, all possess
their peculiar bats. Why, it may be asked,
has the supposed creative force produced
bats and no other mammals on remote islands?
The answer is that the creative force did
not produce bats, or any other creatures,
on oceanic islands. All of Darwin's observations
about island biogeography point to one explanation:
species on islands descend from individuals
who successfully colonized from the mainland
and subsequently evolved into new species.
Only the theory of evolution explains the
paucity of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians,
and freshwater fish on oceanic islands (they
cannot get there), the radiation of some
groups into many species (the few species
that make it to islands find empty niches
and speciate profusely), and the resemblance
of island species to those from the nearest
mainland (an island colonist is most likely
to have come from the closest source).
In the last 150 years, immense amounts of
new evidence have been collected about biogeography,
embryology, and, especially, the fossil record.
All of it supports evolution. But support
for the idea of natural selection was not
so strong, and Darwin had no direct evidence
for it. He relied instead on two arguments.
The first was logical. If individuals in
a population varied genetically (which they
do), and some of this variation affected
the individual's chance of leaving descendants
(which seems likely), then natural selection
would work automatically, enriching the population
in genes that better adapted individuals
to their environment.
The second argument was analogical. Artificial
selection used by breeders had wrought immense
changes in plants and animals, a fact familiar
to everyone. From the ancestral wolf, humans
selected forms as diverse as Chihuahuas,
St. Bernards, poodles, and bulldogs. Starting
with wild cabbage, breeders produced domestic
cabbage, broccoli, kohlrabi, kale, cauliflower,
and Brussels sprouts. Artificial selection
is nearly identical to natural selection,
except that humans rather than the environment
determine which variants leave offspring.
And if artificial selection can produce such
a diversity of domesticated plants and animals
in a thousand-odd years, natural selection
could obviously do much more over millions
of years.
But we no longer need to buttress natural
selection solely with analogy and logic.
Biologists have now observed hundreds of
cases of natural selection, beginning with
the well-known examples of bacterial resistance
to antibiotics, insect resistance to DDT,
and HIV resistance to antiviral drugs. Natural
selection accounts for the resistance of
fish and mice to predators by making them
more camouflaged, and for the adaptation
of plants to toxic minerals in the soil.
(A long list of examples may be found in
Natural Selection in the Wild, by John Endler.)
Moreover, the strength of selection observed
in the wild, when extrapolated over long
periods, is more than adequate to explain
the diversification of life on Earth.
Since 1859, Darwin's theories have been expanded,
and we now know that some evolutionary change
can be caused by forces other than natural
selection. For example, random and non-adaptive
changes in the frequencies of different genetic
variants ó the genetic equivalent of coin-tossing
ó have produced evolutionary changes in DNA
sequences. Yet selection is still the only
known evolutionary force that can produce
the fit between organism and environment
(or between organism and organism) that makes
nature seem "designed." As the
geneticist Theodosius Dobzhansky remarked,
"Nothing in biology makes sense except
in the light of evolution."
And so evolution has graduated from theory
to fact. We know that species on earth today
descended from earlier, different species,
and that every pair of species had a common
ancestor that existed in the past. Most evolutionary
change in the features of organisms, moreover,
is almost certainly the result of natural
selection. But we must also remember that,
like all scientific truths, the truth of
evolution is provisional: it could conceivably
be overturned by future investigations. It
is possible (but unlikely!) that we could
find human fossils co-existing with dinosaurs,
or fossils of birds living alongside those
of the earliest invertebrates 600 million
years ago. Either observation would sink
neo-Darwinism for good.
When applied to evolution, the erroneous
distinction between theory and fact shows
why tactics such as the Dover disclaimer
and the Cobb County textbook sticker are
doubly pernicious. To teach that a scientific
theory is equivalent to a "guess"
or a "hunch" is deeply misleading,
and to assert that "evolution is a theory,
not a fact" is simply false. And why
should evolution, alone among scientific
theories, be singled out with the caveat
"This material should be approached
with an open mind, studied carefully and
critically considered"? Why haven't
school boards put similar warnings in physics
textbooks, noting that gravity and electrons
are only theories, not facts, and should
be critically considered? After all, nobody
has ever seen gravity or an electron. The
reason that evolution stands alone is clear:
other scientific theories do not offend religious
sensibilities.
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III.
Given the copious evidence for evolution,
it seems unlikely that it will be replaced
by an alternative theory. But that is exactly
what intelligent-design creationists are
demanding. Is there some dramatic new evidence,
then, or some insufficiency of neo-Darwinism,
that warrants overturning the theory of evolution?
The question is worth asking, but the answer
is no. Intelligent design is simply the third
attempt of creationists to proselytize our
children at the expense of good science and
clear thinking. Having failed to ban evolution
from schools, and later to get equal classroom
time for scientific creationism, they have
made a few adjustments designed to sneak
Christian cosmogony past the First Amendment.
And these adjustments have given ID a popularity
never enjoyed by earlier forms of creationism.
Even the president of the United States has
lent a sympathetic ear: George W. Bush recently
told reporters in Texas that intelligent
design should be taught in public schools
alongside evolution because "part of
education is to expose people to different
schools of thought." Articles by IDers,
or about their "theory," regularly
appear in mainstream publications such as
The New York Times.
Why have the new image and the new approach
been more successful? For a start, IDers
have duped many people by further removing
God from the picture, or at least hiding
him behind the frame. No longer do creationists
mention a deity, or even a creator, but simply
a neutral-sounding "intelligent designer,"
as if it were not the same thing. This designer
could in principle be Brahma, or the Taoist
P'an Ku, or even a space alien; but ID creationists,
as will be evident to anybody who attends
to all that they say, mean only one entity:
the biblical God. Their problem is that invoking
this deity in science classes in public schools
is unconstitutional. So IDers never refer
openly to God, and people unfamiliar with
the history of their creationist doctrine
might believe that there is a real scientific
theory afoot. They use imposing new terms
such as "irreducible complexity,"
which make their arguments seem more sophisticated
than those of earlier creationists.
In addition, many IDers have more impressive
academic credentials than did earlier scientific
creationists, whose talks and antics always
bore a whiff of the revival meeting. Unlike
scientific creationists, many IDers work
at secular institutions rather than at Bible
schools. IDers work, speak, and write like
trained academics; they do not come off as
barely repressed evangelists. Their ranks
include Phillip Johnson, the most prominent
spokesperson for ID, and a retired professor
of law at the University of California, Berkeley;
Michael Behe, a professor of biochemistry
at Lehigh University; William Dembski, a
mathematician- philosopher and the director
of the Center for Theology and Science at
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; and
Jonathan Wells, who has a doctorate in biology
from Berkeley.
All of these proponents, save Johnson, are
senior fellows at the Center for Science
and Culture (CSC), a division of the Discovery
Institute, which is a conservative think
tank in Seattle. (Johnson is the "program
advisor" to the CSC.) The CSC is the
nerve center of the intelligentdesign movement.
Its origins are demonstrably religious: as
described by the Discovery Institute, the
CSC was designed explicitly "to defeat
scientific materialism and its destructive
moral, cultural, and political legacies"
and "to replace materialistic explanations
with the theistic understanding that nature
and human beings are created by God."
Between them, these IDers have published
more than a dozen books about intelligent
design (Johnson alone has produced eight),
which in turn have provoked numerous responses
by scientists. Let us examine one of their
most influential volumes, the textbook called
Of Pandas and People . This is the book recommended
by the Dover school district as a "reference
book" for students interested in learning
about intelligent design.
Of Pandas and People is a textbook designed
as an antidote to the evolution segment of
high school biology classes. It was first
published in 1989. By repackaging and updating
a subset of traditional young- earth creationist
arguments while avoiding taking a stand on
any issues that might divide creationists
(such as the age of the Earth), it marked
the beginning of the modern intelligent design
movement. By presenting the case for ID,
it is supposedly designed to give students
a "balanced perspective" on evolution.
Although the second edition of Pandas is
now twelve years old (a third edition, called
Design of Life, is in the works), it accurately
presents to students the major arguments
for ID.
Pandas carefully avoids mentioning God (except
under aliases such as "intelligent designer,"
"master intellect," and so on);
but a little digging reveals the book's deep
religious roots. One of its authors, Percival
Davis, wrote explicitly about his religious
beliefs in his book A Case for Creation,
co-authored with Wayne Frair: "Truth
as God sees it is revealed in the pages of
Scripture, and that revelation is therefore
more certainly true than any human rationalism.
For the creationist, revealed truth controls
his view of the universe to at least as great
a degree as anything that has been advanced
using the scientific method." Its other
author, Dean Kenyon, has written approvingly
of scientific creationism.
Pandas is published by the Haughton Publishing
Company of Dallas, a publisher of agricultural
books, but the copyright is held by the Foundation
for Thought and Ethics
(FTE) in Richardson, Texas. Although the
FTE website scrupulously avoids mentioning
religion, its articles of incorporation note
with stark clarity that its "primary
purpose is both religious and educational,
which includes, but is not limited to, proclaiming,
preaching, teaching, promoting, broadcasting,
disseminating, and otherwise making known
the Christian gospel and understanding of
the Bible and the light it sheds on the academic
and social issues of our day." In a
fund-raising letter for the proposed third
edition of Pandas, Jon Buell, president of
the FTE, is equally frank about his goals:
We will energetically continue to publish
and propel these strategic tools in the battle
for the minds and hearts of the young....
Yes, most young Americans are exposed to
numerous gospel presentations. But the fog
of the alien world view deadens their responses.
This is why we have to inundate them with
a rational, defensible, well-argued Judeo-Christian
world view. FTE's carefully-researched books
do just that.
Charles Thaxton, the "academic editor"
of Pandas , is the director of curriculum
research for FTE and a fellow of the CSC.
In a proto-ID book on the origin of life,
Thaxton argued that "Special Creation
by a Creator beyond the cosmos is a plausible
view of origin science."
Given Pandas' pedigree and the affiliations
of its authors, it is not surprising that
the book is nothing more than disguised creationism.
What is surprising is the transparency of
this disguise. Despite the efforts of IDers
to come up with new anti-Darwinian arguments,
Pandas turns out to be nothing more than
recycled scientific creationism, with most
of the old arguments buffed up and proffered
as new. (Unlike scientific creationism, however,
Pandas adopts a studied neutrality toward
the facts of astronomy and geology, instead
of denying them outright.)
Pandas' discussion of the Earth's age is
a prime example of the book's creationist
roots, and of its anti-scientific attitude.
If the Earth were young ó say, the 6,000
to 10,000 years old posited by "young
earth" biblical creationists ó then
evolution would be false. Life simply could
not have originated, evolved, and diversified
in such a short time. But we now know from
several independent and mutually corroborating
lines of evidence that the Earth is 4.6 billion
years old. All geologists agree on this.
So what is Pandas' stance on this critical
issue? The book merely notes that design
proponents "are divided on the issue
of the earth's age. Some take the view that
the earth's history can be compressed into
a framework of thousands of years, while
others adhere to the standard old earth chronology."
Well, what's the truth? This equivocation
is an attempt to paper over a strong disagreement
between young-earth creationists and old-earth
creationists, both of whom have marched under
the banner of ID. It is typical of creationists
to exploit disagreements between evolutionists
as proof that neo-Darwinism is dead while
at the same time hiding their own disagreements
from the public.
This equivocation about the fundamental fact
of Earth's age does not bode well for the
textbook's treatment of the fossil record.
Indeed, in this area the authors continue
their misrepresentations. Their basic premise
is the old creationist argument that organisms
appeared simultaneously and have remained
largely unchanged ever since. Pandas says
of the fossil record that "fully formed
organisms appear all at once, separated by
distinct gaps." That's not exactly true.
Different types of organisms appear in a
distinct sequence supporting evolution. The
first fossils of living organisms, bacteria,
appear 3.5 billion years ago, followed two
billion years later by algae, the first organisms
having true cells with a nucleus containing
distinct chromosomes. Then, 600 million years
ago, we see the appearance of rudimentary
animals with shells, and many soft-bodied
marine organisms. Later, in the Cambrian
period, about 543 million years ago, a number
of groups arose in a relatively short period
of time, the so-called "Cambrian explosion."
("Short period" here means geologically
short, in this case 10 million to 30 million
years). The Cambrian groups include mollusks,
starfish, arthropods, worms, and chordates
(including vertebrates). And in some cases,
such as worms, modern groups do not just
spring into being, but increase in complexity
over millions of years.
Creationists have always made much of the
"Cambrian explosion," and IDers
are no exception. The relatively sudden appearance
of many groups seems to support the Genesis
view of creation. But IDers - and Pandas
- fail to emphasize several facts. First,
the Cambrian explosion was not "sudden";
it took many millions of years. (We still
do not understand why many groups originated
in even this relatively short time, although
it may reflect an artifact: the evolution
of easily fossilized hard parts suddenly
made organisms capable of being fossilized.)
Moreover, the species of the Cambrian are
no longer with us, though their descendants
are. But over time, nearly every species
that ever lived (more than 99 percent of
them) has gone extinct without leaving descendants.
Finally, many animals and plants do not show
up as fossils until well after the Cambrian
explosion: bony fishes and land plants first
appeared around 440 million years ago, reptiles
around 350 million years ago, mammals around
250 million years ago, flowering plants around
210 million years ago, and human ancestors
around 5 million years ago. The staggered
appearance of groups that become very different
over the next 500 million years gives no
support to the notion of instantaneously
created species that thereafter remain largely
unchanged. If this record does reflect the
exertions of an intelligent designer, he
was apparently dissatisfied with nearly all
of his creations, repeatedly destroying them
and creating a new set of species that just
happened to resemble descendants of those
that he had destroyed.
Pandas also makes much of the supposed absence
of transitional forms: the "missing"
links between major forms of life that, according
to evolutionary theory, must have existed
as common ancestors. Their absence, claim
creationists, is a major embarrassment for
evolutionary biology. Phillip Johnson's influential
book Darwin on Trial, which appeared in 1993,
particularly emphasizes these gaps, which,
IDers believe, reflect the designer's creation
of major forms ex nihilo. And there are indeed
some animals, such as bats, that appear in
the fossil record suddenly, without obvious
ancestors. Yet in most cases these gaps are
certainly due to the imperfection of the
fossil record. (Most organisms do not get
buried in aquatic sediments, which is a prerequisite
for fossilization.) And species that are
soft-bodied or have fragile bones, such as
bats, degrade before they can fossilize.
Paleontologists estimate that we have fossils
representing only about one in a thousand
of all the species that ever lived.
In its treatment of evolutionary transitions,
Pandas is again guilty of distortion. Paleontologists
have uncovered many transitional forms between
major groups, almost more than we have a
right to expect. Pandas simply ignores ó
or waves away ó these "non-missing links,"
stating that "we cannot form a smooth,
unambiguous transitional series linking,
let's say, the first small horse to today's
horse, fishes to amphibians, or reptiles
to mammals." This is flatly wrong. All
three cited transitions (and others) are
well documented with fossils. Moreover, the
transitional forms appear at exactly the
right time in the fossil record: after the
ancestral forms already existed, but before
the "linked" later group had evolved.
Take one example: the link between early
reptiles and later mammals, the so-called
mammal-like reptiles. Three hundred fifty
million years ago, the world was full of
reptiles, but there were no mammals. By 250
million years ago, mammals had appeared on
the scene. (Fossil reptiles are easily distinguished
from fossil mammals by a complex of skeletal
traits including features of the teeth and
skull.) Around 275 million years ago, forms
appear that are intermediate in skeletal
traits between reptiles and mammals, in some
cases so intermediate that the animals cannot
be unambiguously classified as either reptiles
or mammals. These mammal-like reptiles, which
become less reptilian and more mammalian
with time, are the no-longer-missing links
between the two forms, important not only
because they have the traits of both forms,
but also because they occur at exactly the
right time.
One of these traits is worth examining in
detail because it is among the finest examples
of an evolutionary transition. This trait
is the "chewing" hinge where the
jaw meets the skull. In early reptiles (and
their modern reptilian descendants), the
lower jaw comprises several bones, and the
hinge is formed by the quadrate bone of the
skull and the articular bone of the jaw.
As mammal-like reptiles become more mammalian,
these hinge bones become smaller, and ultimately
the jaw hinge shifts to a different pair
of bones: the dentary (our "jawbone")
and the squamosal, another bone of the skull.
(The quadrate and articular, much reduced,
moved into the middle ear of mammals, forming
two of the bones that transmit sounds from
the eardrum to the middle ear.) The dentary-squamosal
articulation occurs in all modern mammals,
the quadrate-articular in modern reptiles;
and this difference is often used as the
defining feature of these groups.
Like earlier creationist tracts, Pandas simply
denies that this evolution of the jaw hinge
occurred. It asserts that "there is
no fossil record of such an amazing process,"
and further notes that such a migration would
be "extraordinary." This echoes
the old creationist argument that an adaptive
transition from one type of hinge to another
by means of natural selection would be impossible:
members of a species could not eat during
the evolutionary period when their jaws were
being unhinged and then rehinged. (The implication
is that the intelligent designer must have
done this job instantaneously and miraculously.)
But we have long known how this transition
happened. It was easily accomplished by natural
selection. In 1958, Alfred Crompton described
the critical fossil: the mammal-like reptile
Diarthrognathus broomi. D. broomi has, in
fact, a double jaw joint with two hinges
ó the reptilian one and the mammalian one!
Obviously, this animal could chew. What better
"missing link" could we find?
It should embarrass IDers that so many of
the missing links cited by Pandas as evidence
for supernatural intervention are no longer
missing. Creationists make a serious mistake
when using the absence of transitional forms
as evidence for an intelligent designer.
In the last decade, paleontologists have
uncovered a fairly complete evolutionary
series of whales, beginning with fully terrestrial
animals that became more and more aquatic
over time, with their front limbs evolving
into flippers and their hind limbs and pelvis
gradually reduced to tiny vestiges. When
such fossils are found, as they often are,
creationists must then punt and change their
emphasis to other missing links, continually
retreating before the advance of science.
As for other transitional forms, IDers simply
dismiss them as aberrant fossils. Pandas
characterizes Homo erectus and other probable
human ancestors as "little more than
apes." But this is false. While H. erectus
has a skull with large brow ridges and a
braincase much smaller than ours, the rest
of its skeleton is nearly identical to that
of modern humans. The famous fossil Archaeopteryx,
a small dinosaur-like creature with teeth
and a basically reptilian skeleton but also
with wings and feathers, is probably on or
closely related to the line of dinosaurs
that evolved into birds. But Pandas dismisses
this fossil as just an "odd-ball"
type, and laments instead the lack of the
unfossilizable: "If only we could find
a fossil showing scales developing the properties
of feathers, or lungs that were intermediate
between the very different reptilian and
avian lungs, then we would have more to go
on." It is again a typical creationist
strategy that when skeletons of missing links
turn up, creationists ignore them and insist
that evidence of intermediacy be sought instead
in the soft parts that rarely fossilize.
In sum, the treatment of the fossil evidence
for evolution in Pandas is shoddy and deceptive,
and offers no advance over the discredited
arguments of scientific creationism.
In contrast to its long treatment and dismissal
of the fossil record, Pandas barely deals
with evidence for evolution from development
and vestigial traits. The best it can do
is note that vestigial features can have
a function, and therefore are not really
vestigial. The vestigial pelvic bones and
legs of the transitional whale Basilosaurus,
which were not connected to the skeleton,
may have functioned as a guide for the penis
during mating. Such a use, according to the
authors of Pandas , means that the legs and
pelvis "were not vestigial as originally
thought." But this argument is wrong:
no evolutionist denies that the remnants
of ancestral traits can retain some functionality
or be co-opted for other uses. The "penis
guide" has every bone in the mammalian
pelvis and rear leg in reduced form ó femur,
tibia, fibula, and digits. In Basilosaurus,
nearly all of these structures lay within
the body wall, and most parts were immobile.
Apparently the intelligent designer had a
whimsical streak, choosing to construct a
sex aid that looked exactly like a degenerate
pelvis and set of hind limbs.
And what about the strong evidence for evolution
from biogeography? About this Pandas , like
all creationist books, says nothing. The
omission is strategic. It would be very hard
for IDers to give plausible reasons why an
"intelligent" designer stocked
oceanic islands with only a few types of
animals and plants ó and just those types
with the ability to disperse from the nearest
mainland. Biogeography has always been the
Achilles' heel of creationists, so they just
ignore it.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV.
Although intelligent design rejects much
of the evidence for evolution, it still admits
that some evolutionary change occurs through
natural selection. This change is what Pandas
calls "microevolution," or "small
scale genetic changes, observable in organisms."
Such microevolutionary changes include the
evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria,
changes in the proportion of different-colored
moths due to predation by birds, and all
changes wrought by artificial selection.
But Pandas hastens to add that microevolution
gives no evidence for the origin of diverse
types of organisms, because "these limited
changes do not accumulate the way Darwinian
evolutionary theory requires in order to
produce macro changes. The process that produces
macroevolutionary changes [defined here as
"large scale changes, leading to new
levels of complexity"] must be different
from any that geneticists have studied so
far."
So, though one can use selection to transform
a wolf into either a Chihuahua or a St. Bernard,
that is merely microevolution: they are all
still dogs. And a DDT-resistant fly is still
a fly. Pandas thus echoes the ID assertion
that natural selection cannot do more than
create microevolutionary changes: "It
cannot produce new characteristics. It only
acts on traits that already exist."
But this is specious reasoning. As we have
noted, fossils already show that "macro
change," as defined by Pandas , has
occurred in the fossil record (the evolution
of fish into amphibians, and so on). And
if breeders have not turned a dog into another
kind of animal, it is because dog breeding
has been going on for only a few thousand
years, while the differences between dogs
and cats, for example, have evolved over
more than ten million years. No principle
of evolution dictates that evolutionary changes
observed during a human lifetime cannot be
extrapolated to much longer periods.
In fact, Pandas admits that the fruit flies
of Hawaii ó a diverse group of more than
300 species ó have all evolved from a common
ancestor. We now know that this common ancestor
lived about 20 million years ago. The species
of Hawaiian flies differ in many traits,
including size, shape, ecology, color pattern,
mating behavior, and so on. One can in fact
make a good case that some of the fly species
differ more from each other than humans differ
from chimps. Why, then, do IDers assert that
chimps and humans
(whose ancestor lived only 5 million years
ago) must have resulted from separate acts
of creation by the intelligent designer,
while admitting that fruit flies evolved
from a common ancestor that lived 20 million
years ago? The answer is that humans must
at all costs not be lumped in with other
species, so as to protect the biblical status
of humans as uniquely created in God's image.
According to Pandas, the theory of "limits
to evolution" is a scientific one: "The
idea of intelligent design does not preclude
the possibility that variation within species
occurs, or that new species are formed from
existing populations . . . the theory of
intelligent design does suggest that there
are limits to the amount of variation that
natural selection and random change mechanisms
can produce." But there is nothing in
the theory of intelligent design that tells
us how far evolution can go. This "thus
far and no further" view of evolution
comes not from any scientific findings of
ID; it comes from ID's ancestor, scientific
creationism. Scientific Creationism notes
that "the creation model . . . recognizes
only the kind as the basic created unit,
in this case, mankind," and a chart
contrasting evolution with the "creation
model" says that the former predicts
"new kinds appearing," while the
latter says "no new kinds appearing."
But what is a "kind"? No creationist
has ever defined it, though they are all
very sure that humans and apes are different
"kinds." In fact, the notion that
evolution and creation have operated together,
with the latter creating distinct "kinds,"
was nicely rebutted by Darwin in On the Origin
of Species:
Several eminent naturalists . . . admit that
they [evolved species] have been produced
by variation, but they refuse to extend the
same view to other and very slightly different
forms. Nevertheless they do not pretend that
they can define, or even conjecture, which
are the created forms of life, and which
are those produced by secondary laws. They
admit variation as a vera causa in one case,
they arbitrarily reject it in another, without
assigning any distinction in the two cases.
The day will come when this will be given
as a curious illustration of the blindness
of preconceived opinion. These authors seem
no more startled at a miraculous act of creation
than at an ordinary birth. But do they really
believe that at innumerable periods in the
earth's history certain elemental atoms have
been commanded suddenly to flash into living
tissues? Do they believe that at each supposed
act of creation one individual or many were
produced? Were all the infinitely numerous
kinds of animals and plants created as egg
or seed, or as full grown? and in the case
of mammals, were they created bearing the
false marks of nourishment from the mother's
womb? Although naturalists very properly
demand a full explanation of every difficulty
from those who believe in the mutability
of species, on their own side they ignore
the whole subject of the first appearance
of species in what they consider reverent
silence.
In fact, the biblical appendix of Scientific
Creationism shows that the term "kind"
derives from the biblical notion of created
kinds:
The Scriptures are very clear in their teaching
that God created all things as He wanted
them to be, each with its own particular
structure, according to His own sovereign
purposes. The account of Genesis 1, for example,
indicates that at least ten major categories
of organic life were specially created "after
his kind." . . . Finally, man "kind"
was created as another completely separate
category. The phrase "after his kind"
occurs ten times in this first chapter of
Genesis.
There is thus a clear line of descent from
the story of Genesis to the ID notion of
evolutionary limits, a line charted by what
Darwin called "the blindness of preconceived
opinion." Until IDers tell us what the
limits to evolution are, how they can be
ascertained, and what evidence supports these
limits, this notion cannot be regarded as
a genuinely scientific claim.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
V.
IDers make one claim that they tout as truly
novel, a claim that has become quite popular.
It is the idea that organisms show some adaptations
that could not be built by natural selection,
thus implying the need for a supernatural
creative force such as an intelligent designer.
These adaptations share a property called
"irreducible complexity," a characteristic
discussed in Pandas but defined more explicitly
by Michael Behe in 1996 in his book Darwin's
Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution:
"By irreducibly complex I mean a single
system composed of several well-matched,
interacting parts that contribute to the
basic function, wherein the removal of any
one of the parts causes the system to effectively
cease functioning."
Many man-made objects show this property:
Behe cites the mousetrap, which would not
work if even one part were removed, such
as the catch, the spring, the base, and so
on. Pandas mentions a car engine, which will
not work if one removes the fan belt, spark
plugs, distributor cap, or any of numerous
individual parts. A famous example of an
irreducibly complex system in the biological
realm is the "camera" eye of humans
and other vertebrates. The eye has many parts
whose individual removal would render the
organ useless, including the lens, retina,
and optic nerve.
The reason IDers love "irreducibly complex"
features of organisms is that natural selection
is powerless (or so they claim) to create
such features. As Behe notes:
An irreducibly complex system cannot be produced
directly ... by slight, successive modifications
of a precursor system, because any precursor
to an irreducibly complex system that is
missing a part is by definition nonfunctional....
Since natural selection can only choose systems
that are already working, then if a biological
system cannot be produced gradually it would
have to arise as an integrated unit, in one
fell swoop, for natural selection to have
anything to act on.
"One fell swoop," of course, implies
that the feature must have been produced
by the miraculous intervention of the intelligent
designer.
But this argument for intelligent design
has a fatal flaw. We have realized for decades
that natural selection can indeed produce
systems that, over time, become integrated
to the point where they appear to be irreducibly
complex. But these features do not evolve
by the sequential addition of parts to a
feature that becomes functional only at the
end. They evolve by adding, via natural selection,
more and more parts into an originally rudimentary
but functional system, with these parts sometimes
co-opted from other structures. Every step
of this process improves the organism's survival,
and so is evolutionarily possible via natural
selection.
Consider the eye. Creationists have long
maintained that it could not have resulted
from natural selection, citing a sentence
from On the Origin of Species: "To suppose
that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances
for adjusting the focus to different distances,
for admitting different amounts of light,
and for the correction of spherical and chromatic
aberration, could have been formed by natural
selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd
in the highest degree." But in the next
passage, invariably omitted by creationists,
Darwin ingeniously answers his own objection:
Reason tells me, that if numerous gradations
from a simple and imperfect eye to one complex
and perfect can be shown to exist, each grade
being useful to its possessor, as is certainly
the case; if further, the eye ever varies
and the variations be inherited, as is likewise
certainly the case and if such variations
should be useful to any animal under changing
conditions of life, then the difficulty of
believing that a perfect and complex eye
could be formed by natural selection, though
insuperable by our imagination, should not
be considered as subversive of the theory.
Thus our eyes did not suddenly appear as
full-fledged camera eyes, but evolved from
simpler eyes, having fewer components, in
ancestral species. Darwin brilliantly addressed
this argument by surveying existing species
to see if one could find functional but less
complex eyes that not only were useful, but
also could be strung together into a hypothetical
sequence showing how a camera eye might evolve.
If this could be done ó and it can ó then
the argument for irreducible complexity vanishes,
for the eyes of existing species are obviously
useful, and each step in the hypothetical
sequence could thus evolve by natural selection.
A possible sequence of such changes begins
with pigmented eye spots (as seen in flatworms),
followed by an invagination of the skin to
form a cup protecting the eyespot and allowing
it to better localize the image (as in limpets),
followed by a further narrowing of the cup's
opening to produce an improved image (the
nautilus), followed by the evolution of a
protective transparent cover to protect the
opening
(ragworms), followed by coagulation of part
of the fluid in the eyeball into a lens to
help focus the light
(abalones), followed by the co-opting of
nearby muscles to move the lens and vary
the focus (mammals). The evolution of a retina,
an optic nerve, and so on would follow by
natural selection. Each step of this transitional
"series" confers increased adaptation
on its possessor, because it enables the
animal to gather more light or to form better
images, both of which aid survival. And each
step of this process is exemplified by the
eye of a different living species. At the
end of the sequence we have the camera eye,
which seems irreducibly complex. But the
complexity is reducible to a series of small,
adaptive steps.
Now, we do not know the precise order in
which the components of the camera eye evolved
ó but the point is that the appearance of
"irreducible complexity" cannot
be an argument against neo-Darwinism if we
can document a plausible sequence in which
the complexity can arise from a series of
adaptive steps. The "irreducible complexity"
argument is not, in fact, completely novel.
It descends, with modification, from the
British theologian William Paley, who in
1802 raised the famous "argument from
design" in his book Natural Theology.
Paley argued that just as finding a watch
on the ground implies a conscious designer
(the watchmaker), so finding an equally complex
organism implies a cosmic designer (God).
But the eye is not a watch. The human eye,
though eminently functional, is imperfect
ó certainly not the sort of eye an engineer
would create from scratch. Its imperfection
arises precisely because our eye evolved
using whatever components were at hand, or
produced by mutation. Since our retina evolved
from an everted part of the brain, for example,
the nerves and blood vessels that attach
to our photoreceptor cells are on the inside
rather than the outside of the eye, running
over the surface of the retina. Leakage of
these blood vessels can occlude vision, a
problem that would not occur if the vessels
fed the retina from behind. Likewise, to
get the nerve impulses from the photocells
to the brain, the different nerves must join
together and dive back through the eye, forming
the optic nerve. This hole in the retina
creates a blind spot in the eye, a flaw that
again would be avoidable with a priori design.
The whole system is like a car in which all
the wires to the dashboard hang inside the
driver's compartment instead of being tucked
safely out of sight. Evolution differs from
a priori design because it is constrained
to operate by modifying whatever features
have evolved previously. Thus evolution yields
fitter types that often have flaws. These
flaws violate reasonable principles of intelligent
design.
IDers tend to concentrate more on biochemistry
than on organs such as the eye, citing "irreducibly
complex" molecular systems such as the
mechanism for blood-clotting and the immune
system. Like the eye, these systems supposedly
could not have evolved, since removal of
any step in these pathways would render the
entire pathway non-functional. (This biochemical
complexity is the subject of Behe's book
Darwin's Black Box.) Discussing the blood-clotting
system in its sixth chapter (partially written
by Behe), Pandas asserts that "like
a car engine, biological systems can only
work after they have been assembled by someone
who knows what the final result will be."
This is nonsense. As we have seen in the
case of the eye, biological systems are not
useful only at the end of a long evolutionary
process, but during every step of that process.
And biochemical systems ó like all adaptations
created by natural selection ó are not assembled
with foresight. Whatever useful mutations
happen to arise get folded into the system.
There is no doubt that many biochemical systems
are dauntingly complex. A diagram of the
blood-clotting pathway looks like a complicated
circuit board, with dozens of proteins interacting
with one another to one end: healing a wound.
And the system seems irreducibly complex,
because without any of several key proteins,
the blood would not clot. Yet such biochemical
systems evolved in the same way that the
eye evolved, by adding parts successively
and adaptively to simpler, functioning systems.
It is more difficult to trace the evolution
of biochemical pathways than of anatomical
structures because the ancestral metabolic
pathways are no longer present. But biologists
are beginning to provide plausible scenarios
for how "irreducibly complex" biochemical
pathways might have evolved. As expected,
these systems involve using bits co-opted
from other pathways originally having different
functions. (Thus, one of the enzymes in the
blood-clotting system also plays a role in
digestion and cell division.) In view of
our progress in understanding biochemical
evolution, it is simply irrational to say
that because we do not completely understand
how biochemical pathways evolved, we should
give up trying and invoke the intelligent
designer. If the history of science shows
us anything, it is that we get nowhere by
labeling our ignorance "God."
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VI.
Insofar as intelligent-design theory can
be tested scientifically, it has been falsified.
Organisms simply do not look as if they had
been intelligently designed. Would an intelligent
designer create millions of species and then
make them go extinct, only to replace them
with other species, repeating this process
over and over again? Would an intelligent
designer produce animals having a mixture
of mammalian and reptilian traits, at exactly
the time when reptiles are thought to have
been evolving into mammals? Why did the designer
give tiny, non-functional wings to kiwi birds?
Or useless eyes to cave animals? Or a transitory
coat of hair to a human fetus? Or an appendix,
an injurious organ that just happens to resemble
a vestigial version of a digestive pouch
in related organisms? Why would the designer
give us a pathway for making vitamin C, but
then destroy it by disabling one of its enzymes?
Why didn't the intelligent designer stock
oceanic islands with reptiles, mammals, amphibians,
and freshwater fish, despite the suitability
of such islands for these species? And why
would he make the flora and fauna on those
islands resemble that of the nearest mainland,
even when the environments are very different?
Why, about a million years ago, would the
designer produce creatures that have an apelike
cranium perched atop a humanlike skeleton?
And why would he then successively replace
these creatures with others having an ever-closer
resemblance to modern humans?
There are only two answers to these questions:
either life resulted not from intelligent
design, but from evolution; or the intelligent
designer is a cosmic prankster who designed
everything to make it look as though it had
evolved. Few people, religious or otherwise,
will find the second alternative palatable.
It is the modern version of the old argument
that God put fossils in the rocks to test
our faith.
The final blow to the claim that intelligent
design is scientific is its proponents' admission
that we cannot understand the designer's
goals or methods. Behe owns up to this in
Darwin's Black Box: "Features that strike
us as odd in a design might have been placed
there by the designer for a reason ó for
artistic reasons, to show off, for some as-yetundetectable
practical purpose, or for some unguessable
reason ó or they might not." And, discussing
skeletal differences between placental and
marsupial mammals, Pandas notes:
Why were not the North American placentals
given the same bones? Would an intelligent
designer withhold these structures from placentals
if they were superior to the placental system?
At present we do not know; however, we all
recognize that an engineer can choose any
of several different engineering solutions
to overcome a single design problem. An intelligent
designer might reasonably be expected to
use a variety (if a limited variety) of design
approaches to produce a single engineering
solution, also. Even if it is assumed that
an intelligent designer did indeed have a
good reason for every decision that was made,
and for including every trait in each organism,
it does not follow that such reasons will
be obvious to us.
Well, if we admit that the designer had a
number of means and motives, which can be
self-contradictory, arbitrary, improvisatory,
and "unguessable," then we are
left with a theory that cannot be rejected.
Every conceivable observation of nature,
including those that support evolution, becomes
compatible with ID, for the ways of the designer
are unfathomable. And a theory that cannot
be rejected is not a scientific theory. If
IDers want to have a genuinely scientific
theory, let them propose a model that can
be rigorously tested.
Given its lack of rigor, one might expect
that ID theory would not inspire much scientific
research. And there is virtually none. Despite
the claims of ID to be a program of research,
its adherents have published only one refereed
paper supporting ID in a scientific journal:
a review of ID by Stephen C. Meyer, the director
of the Discovery Institute's Center for Science
and Culture, which appeared in the Proceedings
of the Biological Society of Washington.
This paper merely rehashes ID arguments for
why natural selection and evolution cannot
explain the diversity of life and then asserts
that intelligent design is the only alternative.
It distorts the evolutionary literature it
purports to review, and it neither advances
new scientific arguments nor suggests any
way that ID better explains patterns in nature.
Not surprisingly, the Council of the Biological
Society of Washington later disowned the
paper because it did "not meet the scientific
standards of the Proceedings."
The gold standard for modern scientific achievement
is the publication of new results in a peer-reviewed
scientific journal. By that standard, IDers
have failed miserably. As William Dembski
himself noted, "There are good and bad
reasons to be skeptical of intelligent design.
Perhaps the best reason is that intelligent
design has yet to establish itself as a thriving
scientific research program." IDers
desperately crave scientific respectability,
but it is their own theory that prevents
them from attaining it. Thus, while IDers
demand that evolutionists produce thousands
of transitional fossils and hundreds of detailed
scenarios about the evolution of biochemical
pathways, they put forth no observations
supporting the plausibility of a supernatural
designer, nor do they show how appeal to
such a designer could explain the fossil
record, embryology, and biogeography better
than neo-Darwinism. Herbert Spencer could
have been describing ID when he declared
that "those who cavalierly reject the
Theory of Evolution as not being adequately
supported by facts, seem to forget that their
own theory is supported by no facts at all.
Like the majority of men who are born to
a given belief, they demand the most rigorous
proof of any adverse belief, but assume that
their own needs none."
Finally, the reliance of ID on supernatural
intervention means that the enterprise cannot
be seen, strictly speaking, as scientific.
In his rejection of scientific creationism
in McLean v. Arkansas, Judge Overton described
the characteristics of good science:
(1) It is guided by natural law;
(2) It has to be explanatory by reference
to natural law;
(3) It is testable against the empirical
world;
(4) Its conclusions are tentative, i. e.,
are not necessarily the final word; and
(5) It is falsifiable.
By invoking the repeated occurrence of supernatural
intervention by an intelligent designer to
create new species and new traits, ID violates
criteria 1 and 2; and in its ultimate reliance
on Christian dogma and God, it violates criteria
3, 4, and 5.
In candid moments, usually when writing for
or speaking to a religious audience, IDers
admit the existence not only of supernatural
acts as a part of their theory, but also
of Christian supernatural acts. In a foreword
to a book on creationism, Johnson wrote:
"The intelligent design movement starts
with the recognition that 'In the beginning
was the Word,' and 'In the beginning God
created.' Establishing that point isn't enough,
but it is absolutely essential to the rest
of the gospel message." And here is
Dembski writing in Touchstone, a Christian
magazine: "The world is a mirror representing
the divine life.... Intelligent design readily
embraces the sacramental nature of physical
reality. Indeed intelligent design is just
the Logos theology of John's Gospel restated
in the idiom of information theory."
Indeed, in the manuscript draft of the first
edition of Pandas , the terms "creationism,"
"creationist," and "creation"
are used repeatedly instead of the equivalent
ID terms, and "creationism" is
defined identically to "intelligent
design" in the published version. Nothing
gives a clearer indication that one ancestor
of this textbook was the Bible.
It is clear, then, that intelligent design
did not arise because of some long-standing
problems with evolutionary theory, or because
new facts have called neoDarwinism into question.
ID is here for only one reason ó to act as
a Trojan horse poised before the public schools:
a seemingly secular vessel ready to inject
its religious message into the science curriculum.
The contents of Pandas , and of the other
writings of IDers, are simply a cunning pedagogical
ploy to circumvent legal restrictions against
religious creationism. (With any luck, though,
the publicity will backfire. Last month The
York Dispatch in Pennsylvania reported that
the Foundation for Thought and Ethics, the
group that publishes this textbook and others
designed to present "a Christian perspective,"
wanted to intervene in the Dover lawsuit.
According to John Buell, the foundation's
president, the association of ID with creationism
"would make the book radioactive,"
and his outfit could lose as much as $525,000
in sales.)
ID is part of what Johnson candidly calls
the "wedge strategy," a carefully
crafted scheme that begins with the adoption
of intelligent design as an alternative theory
to evolution, after which ID will edge out
evolution until it is the only view left,
after which it will become full-blown biblical
creationism. The ultimate goal is to replace
naturalist science with spiritualist thinking,
and the method is to hammer the wedge of
ID into science at its most vulnerable point:
public education. In Johnson's own words:
So the question is: "How to win?"
That's when I began to develop what you now
see full-fledged in the "wedge"
strategy: "stick with the most important
thing," the mechanism and the building
up of information. Get the Bible and the
Book of Genesis out of the debate because
you do not want to raise the so-called Bible-science
dichotomy. Phrase the argument in such a
way that you can get it heard in the secular
academy and in a way that tends to unify
the religious dissenters. That means concentrating
on, "Do you need a Creator to do the
creating, or can nature do it on its own?"
and refusing to get sidetracked onto other
issues, which people are always trying to
do.
Johnson was even more explicit in 1999 in
remarks to a conference on "Reclaiming
America for Christ." Rob Boston reported
Johnson's remarks in Church & State magazine:
Johnson calls his movement "The Wedge."
The objective, he said, is to convince people
that Darwinism is inherently atheistic, thus
shifting the debate from creationism v. evolution
to the existence of God v. the nonexistence
of God. From there people are introduced
to "the truth" of the Bible and
then "the question of sin" and
finally "introduced to Jesus."
Other major figures in the ID movement have
been equally clear about their religious
motivations. Here is Dembski:
But there are deeper motivations. I think
at a fundamental level, in terms of what
drives me in this is that I think God's glory
is being robbed by these naturalistic approaches
to biological evolution, creation, the origin
of the world, the origin of biological complexity
and diversity. When you are attributing the
wonders of nature to these mindless material
mechanisms, God's glory is getting robbed.
And here is Jonathan Wells, a member of Reverend
Moon's Unification Church:
Father's [Reverend Moon's] words, my studies,
and my prayers convinced me that I should
devote my life to destroying Darwinism, just
as many of my fellow Unificationists had
already devoted their lives to destroying
Marxism. When Father chose me (along with
about a dozen other seminary graduates) to
enter a Ph. D. program in 1978, I welcomed
the opportunity to prepare myself for battle.
Do these people really believe in intelligent
design? There is no reason to think otherwise.
They are not lying for their cause, but sincerely
hold that life on earth reflects a succession
of miracles worked by a supernatural agent.
In fact, they view evolutionists as the duplicitous
ones. In an interview in The Sacramento Bee
in 1991, Johnson proclaimed that "scientists
have long known that Darwinism is false.
They have adhered to the myth out of self-interest
and a zealous desire to put down God."
Never mind that many scientists, including
evolutionists, are religious.
Given the overwhelming evidence for evolution
and the lack of evidence for ID, how can
intelligent people hold such views? Is their
faith so strong that it blinds them to all
evidence? It is a bit more complicated than
that. After all, many theologians and religious
people accept evolution. The real issues
behind intelligent design ó and much of creationism
ó are purpose and morality: specifically,
the fear that if evolution is true, then
we are no different from other animals, not
the special objects of God's creation but
a contingent product of natural selection,
and so we lack real purpose, and our morality
is just the law of the jungle. Tom DeLay
furnished a colorful example of this view
on the floor of the House of Representatives
on June 16, 1999. Explaining the causes of
the massacre at Columbine High School, he
read a sarcastic letter in a Texas newspaper
that suggested that "it couldn't have
been because our school systems teach the
children that they are nothing but glorified
apes who have evolutionized out of some primordial
soup of mud."
The notion that naturalism and materialism
are the enemies of morality and a sense of
human purpose, and that religion is their
only ally, is pervasive in the writings of
IDers. As Johnson noted, "Once God is
culturally determined to be imaginary, then
God's morality loses its foundation and withers
away." Nancy Pearcey, a senior fellow
of the Discovery Institute's Center for Science
and Culture, summarizes why evolution disturbs
so many Americans:
Why does the public care so passionately
about a theory of biology? Because people
sense intuitively that there's much more
at stake than a scientific theory. They know
that when naturalistic evolution is taught
in the science classroom, then a naturalistic
view of ethics will be taught down the hallway
in the history classroom, the sociology classroom,
the family life classroom, and in all areas
of the curriculum.
Even some parents in Dover, though opposed
to teaching ID in school, worry that learning
evolution will erode the Christian values
that they are trying to instill in their
children.
But the acceptance of evolution need not
efface morality or purpose. Evolution is
simply a theory about the process and patterns
of life's diversification, not a grand philosophical
scheme about the meaning of life. Philosophers
have argued for years about whether ethics
should have a basis in nature. There is certainly
no logical connection between evolution and
immorality. Nor is there a causal connection:
in Europe, religion is far less pervasive
than in America, and belief in evolution
is more widespread, but somehow the continent
remains civilized. Most religious scientists,
laymen, and theologians have not found the
acceptance of evolution to impede living
an upright, meaningful life. And the idea
that religion provides the sole foundation
for meaning and morality also cannot be right:
the world is full of skeptics, agnostics,
and atheists who live good and meaningful
lives.
Barring a miracle, the Dover Area School
District will lose its case. Anyone who bothers
to study ID and its evolution from earlier
and more overtly religious forms of creationism
will find it an unscientific, faith- based
theory ultimately resting on the doctrines
of fundamentalist Christianity. Its presentation
in schools thus violates both the Constitution
and the principles of good education. There
is no secular reason why evolutionary biology,
among all the sciences, should be singled
out for a school-mandated disclaimer. But
the real losers will be the people of Dover,
who will likely be saddled with huge legal
bills and either a substantial cut in the
school budget or a substantial hike in property
taxes. We can also expect that, if they lose,
the IDers will re-group and return in a new
disguise even less obviously religious. I
await the formation of the Right to Teach
Problems with Evolution Movement.
IDers have been helped by Americans' continuing
doubts about the truth of evolution. According
to a Gallup poll taken last year, 45 percent
of Americans agree with the statement, "God
created human beings pretty much in their
present form at one time within the last
10,000 years." Asked if evolution is
well supported by evidence, 35 percent of
Americans said yes, 35 percent said no, and
29 percent said they lack the knowledge to
reply. As a rationalist, I cannot help but
believe that the first group would swell
were Americans to be thoroughly taught the
evidence for evolution, which is rarely done
in public high schools. I have seen creationist
students become evolutionists when they learn
about biogeography or examine the skulls
of mammal-like reptiles. What we need in
the schools is not less teaching of evolution
but more.
In the end, many Americans may still reject
evolution, finding the creationist alternative
psychologically more comfortable. But emotion
should be distinguished from thought, and
a "comfort level" should not affect
what is taught in the science classroom.
As Judge Overton wrote in his magisterial
decision striking down Arkansas Act 590,
which mandated equal classroom time for "scientific
creationism":
The application and content of First Amendment
principles are not determined by public opinion
polls or by a majority vote. Whether the
proponents of Act 590 constitute the majority
or the minority is quite irrelevant under
a constitutional system of government. No
group, no matter how large or small, may
use the organs of government, of which the
public schools are the most conspicuous and
influential, to foist its religious beliefs
on others.
First published in The New Republic on August
22nd 2005]
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