|
|||
Further reading:
|
Lets face it: creationists
dont have an easy time claiming academic superiority over their opponents. As much
as they call themselves scientific creationists (essentially an oxymoron), and
despite the existence of the Institute for Creation Research (whatever that is), and even
of creationist museums, anybody can see that the credentials of most creationists are as
good as those of a car salesman. Yet, there is a group of creationists (who dont
actually like being labeled as such) that is tryingwith some successto make
headway in the academic world, or at least with the media and some relatively high ranking
politicians. Meet the Intelligent Design (ID) movement, perhaps the most sophisticated
attack on modern science mounted so far. Mind you,
gaining a sympathetic ear within academia does not necessarily imply intellectual
respectability. Post-modernist philosophers and social scientists have been littering
college classrooms and wasting a lot of perfectly good trees to spread nonsense about the
alleged equal access to truth of any cultural construction, putting science
and astrology (or, for that matter, creationism) on equal footing. But some ID exponents
have legitimate PhDs in science disciplines, they dont make wild claims about a
young earth or a six-day creation, and even manage to get published by major academic
presses. So, who are these neo-creationists, and is there anything of substance to their
claims about evidence for an intelligent creator of the universe? Probably the
first and most important salvo of the modern ID movement was Michael Behes book, Darwins
Black Box: the Biochemical Challenge to Evolution (1996). Behe is a biochemist at
Lehigh University in Pennsylvania and clearly says that he accepts a lot of evolution, so
much so that he should get in plenty of trouble with old-time religion
creationists. However, Behe draws the line at the molecular level: while evolutionists
might be able to explain how humans descended from other primates, and might even have a
good explanation for the evolution of the eye, they cant tell us how complex
biochemical pathways came into existence. Take blood clotting, for example. In order for
the blood to coagulate when a cut through the skin is made, several proteins have to act
in a precise sequence. Take any of them out, and you bleed to death. Or consider the
flagellum of a bacterium (the tail that allows some bacteria to swim). It is
made of several parts intricately interconnected to each other. Again, take one of them
away, and the bacterial cell will be stuck in place forever. But, notices Behe, evolution
is supposed to work gradually and to assemble structures that work at every single step
(since it cannot predict the future use of something). This creates an apparent paradox
whence a mindless natural force is supposed to come up with something that smells terribly
of intelligent design. Isnt this a deathblow to evolution as the explanation of
lifes irreducible complexity? Not so fast.
There are a few things missing from Behes scenario which are worth considering
briefly. First, he has not done his homework. Contrary to what he repeatedly claims in his
book, biologists have done a bit of research on the evolution of biochemical pathways, and
there are several known examples of bacterial flagella that are simpler than the one Behe
conveniently uses. It doesnt take a rocket scientist (or a biochemist) to figure out
that in fact these simpler versions could easily represent intermediate steps toward
complex flagella. Second, it is not trueagain contra Behethat biochemical
pathways are assembled in a way that one cannot take any element away without having the
whole system collapsing. In fact, most of genetical research is based on the ability to
produce mutations that knock down certain genes (and therefore certain components of
biochemical pathways) while still yielding a functional organism to be studied. One of the
major discoveries of 20th century molecular biology (which Behe must have
somehow missed) is that organisms are not irreducibly complex at all; rather, they
show redundant complexity: they are made of several parts that have no unique and
irreplaceable function. As biologist Francois Jacob put it, this is exactly what you would
expect if natural selection worked like a bricoleur rather than a cunning engineer. A
bricoleur is somebody who assembles new things out of old parts that are easily available.
The result is bound to be complex, redundant, suboptimal, and not too pretty. Exactly like
living organisms, and precisely what you would expect from a natural phenomenon. No
intelligent design required. Behe makes
at least two fundamental mistakes in his attack against evolutionary biology (other than
neglecting to check the available literature more thoroughly). Perhaps the subtler of the
two is that he completely ignores the fact that evolutionary biology deals with historical
as well as current events. If one picks a modern organism, say a bacterium of the species Escherichia
coli, and tries to imagine how it could have evolved, one is up against a huge
problem: what you see today under the microscope is not a primitive organism,
but the result of (literally) billions of years of change. As we know from organisms that
actually leave fossils (contrary to most bacteria), more than 99% of the species that ever
existed went extinct. Since most of these dont leave fossils (especially bacteria),
we are lucky if we see a few intermediate links at all, alive or in the fossil record. No
wonder that evolution may look like a series of huge jumps that could not possibly have
been the result of natural selection. Yet Behe behaves as if we didnt know anything
about extinction and evolution, and bases his argument on an extremely naive picture of
biological research and of science in general. The second
fatal mistake is common to all versions of Intelligent Design: the whole approach is
essentially based on an argument from ignorance. Let us assume that biologists really
dont have the foggiest about the way a particular biochemical pathway (aerobic
respiration in mitochondria, for example) came about. What is that supposed to prove? If
Behe were alive at the time of Aristotle, would he be arguing that lightning is clear
proof of Zeus existence because we have no idea of how a natural phenomenon could
possibly provoke such a sudden discharge of energy? And yet this is exactly what the core
of Behes argument is: since we dont know how it happened, it must have been
God. Sorry, Michael, but science is about working hard to find the answers. Bailing out
while invoking a Deus-ex-machina is not the name of the game. Next Month: "Split-brains,
paradigm shifts,
|
||
Further reading:
|
|||
Web links:Kenneth Millers web site
at Brown University: how to debunk Behe in a few strokes of the keyboard. Michael Behes own web site. For
more debunking of Behe, visit Niall
Shanks web site at East Tennessee State University. |
|||
![]() Visit Massimo's Skeptic & Humanist Web |
|||
|
|||