Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Fredwin On EvolutionVery Long, Will Bore Hell Out Of Most People, But I Felt Like Doing
ItMarch 7, 2005I was about fifteen when I began to think about evolution. I was
then just discovering the sciences systematically, and took them as
what they offered themselves to be, a realm of reason and
dispassionate regard for truth. There was a hard-edged clarity to
them that I liked. You got real answers. Since evolution depended
on such sciences as chemistry, I regarded it as also being a
science.
The question of the origin of life interested me. The evolutionary
explanations that I encountered in textbooks of biology ran to, “In
primeval seas, evaporation concentrated dissolved compounds in a
pore in a rock, a skim formed a membrane, and life began its
immense journey.” I saw no reason to doubt this. If it hadn’t been
true, scientists would not have said that it was.
Remember, I was fifteen.
In those days I read Scientific American and New Scientist, the
latter then still being thoughtfully written in good English. I noticed
that not infrequently they offered differing speculation as to the
origin of life. The belief in the instrumentality of chemical accident
was constant, but the nature of the primeval soup changed to fit
varying attempts at explanation.
For a while, life was thought to have come about on clay in shallow
water in seas of a particular composition, later in tidal pools with
another chemical solution, then in the open ocean in another
solution. This continues. Recently, geothermal vents have been
offered as the home of the first life. Today (Feb 24, 2005) on the
BBC website, I learn that life evolved below the oceanic floor.
(“There is evidence that life evolved in the deep sediments," co-
author John Parkes, of Cardiff University, UK, told the BBC News
website.” Link at bottom.)
The frequent shifting of ground bothered me. If we knew how life
began, why did we have so many prospective mechanisms, none of
which really worked? Evolution began to look like a theory in search
of a soup. Forty-five years later, it still does.Questions Arise
I was probably in college when I found myself asking what seemed
to me straightforward questions about the chemical origin of life.
In particular:
(1) Life was said to have begun by chemical inadvertence in the
early seas. Did we, I wondered, really know of what those early
seas consisted? Know, not suspect, hope, theorize, divine,
speculate, or really, really wish.
The answer was, and is, “no.” We have no dried residue, no
remaining pools, and the science of planetogenesis isn’t nearly
good enough to provide a quantitative analysis.
(2) Had the creation of a living cell been replicated in the
laboratory? No, it hadn’t, and hasn’t. (Note 1)
(3) Did we know what conditions were necessary for a cell to come
about? No, we didn’t, and don’t.
(4) Could it be shown to be mathematically probable that a cell
would form, given any soup whatever? No, it couldn’t, and can’t.
(At least not without cooking the assumptions.) (Note 2)
Well, I thought, sophomore chemistry major that I then was: If we
don’t know what conditions existed, or what conditions are
necessary, and can’t reproduce the event in the laboratory, and
can’t show it to be statistically probable—why are we so very sure
that it happened? Would you hang a man on such evidence?
My point was not that evolutionists were necessarily wrong. I
simply didn’t see the evidence. While they couldn’t demonstrate
that life had begun by chemical accident, I couldn’t show that it
hadn’t. An inability to prove that something is statistically possible
is not the same as proving that it is not possible. Not being able to
reproduce an event in the laboratory does not establish that it
didn’t happen in nature. Etc.
I just didn’t know how life came about. I still don’t. Neither do
evolutionists.
What Distinguishes Evolution from Other Science
Early on, I noticed three things about evolution that differentiated it
from other sciences (or, I could almost say, from science). First,
plausibility was accepted as being equivalent to evidence. (And of
course the less you know, the greater the number of things that
are plausible, because there are fewer facts to get in the way.)
Again and again evolutionists assumed that suggesting how
something might have happened was equivalent to establishing
how it had happened. Asking them for evidence usually aroused
annoyance and sometimes, if persisted in, hostility.
As an example, it seems plausible to evolutionists that life arose by
chemical misadventure. By this they mean (I think) that they cannot
imagine how else it might have come about. (Neither can I. Does
one accept a poor explanation because unable to think of a good
one?) This accidental-life theory, being somewhat plausible, is
therefore accepted without the usual standards of science, such as
reproducibility or rigorous demonstration of mathematical
feasibility. Putting it otherwise, evolutionists are too attached to
their ideas to be able to question them.
Consequently, discussion often turns to vague and murky
assertion. Starlings are said to have evolved to be the color of dirt
so that hawks can’t see them to eat them. This is plausible. But
guacamayos and cockatoos are gaudy enough to be seen from
low-earth orbit. Is there a contradiction here? No, say evolutionists.
Guacamayos are gaudy so they can find each other to mate. Always
there is the pat explanation. But starlings seem to mate with great
success, though invisible. If you have heard a guacamayo shriek,
you can hardly doubt that another one could easily find it.
Enthusiasts of evolution then told me that guacamayos were at the
top of their food chain, and didn’t have predators. Or else that the
predators were colorblind. On and on it goes. But…is any of this
established?Second, evolution seemed more a metaphysics or ideology than a
science. The sciences, as I knew them, gave clear answers.
Evolution involved intense faith in fuzzy principles. You
demonstrated chemistry, but believed evolution. If you have ever
debated a Marxist, or a serious liberal or conservative, or a feminist
or Christian, you will have noticed that, although they can be
exceedingly bright and well informed, they display a maddening
imprecision. You never get a straight answer if it is one they do not
want to give. Nothing is ever firmly established. Crucial assertions
do not tie to observable reality. Invariably the Marxist (or
evolutionist) assumes that a detailed knowledge of economic
conditions under the reign of Nicholas II or whatever substitutes
for being able to answer simple questions, such as why Marxism
has never worked: the Fallacy of Irrelevant Knowledge. And of
course almost anything can be made believable by considering only
favorable evidence and interpreting hard.Third, evolutionists are obsessed by Christianity and Creationism,
with which they imagine themselves to be in mortal combat. This is
peculiar to them. Note that other sciences, such as astronomy and
geology, even archaeology, are equally threatened by the notion
that the world was created in 4004 BC. Astronomers pay not the
slightest attention to creationist ideas. Nobody does—except
evolutionists. We are dealing with competing religions—
overarching explanations of origin and destiny. Thus the fury of
their response to skepticism.
I found it pointless to tell them that I wasn’t a Creationist. They
refused to believe it. If they had, they would have had to answer
questions that they would rather avoid. Like any zealots, they
cannot recognize their own zealotry. Thus their constant
classification of skeptics as enemies (a word they often use)—of
truth, of science, of Darwin, of progress.
This tactical demonization is not unique to evolution. “Creationist”
is to evolution what “racist” is to politics: A way of preventing
discussion of what you do not want to discuss. Evolution is the
political correctness of science.
The Lair of the Beast
I have been on several lists on the internet that deal with matters
such as evolution, have written on the subject, and have discussed
evolution with various of its adherents. These men (almost all of
them are) have frequently been very bright indeed, often Ivy League
professors, some of them with names you would recognize. They
are not amateurs of evolution or high-school principals in Kansas
eager to prove their modernity. I asked them the questions in the
foregoing (about whether we really know what the primeval seas
consisted of, etc.) I knew the answers; I wanted to see how serious
proponents of evolutionary biology would respond to awkward
questions. It was like giving a bobcat a prostate exam. I got everything but
answers. They told me I was a crank, implied over and over that I
was a Creationist, said that I was an enemy of science (someone
who asks for evidence is an enemy of science). They said that I was
trying to pull down modern biology (if you ask questions about an
aspect of biology, you want to pull down biology). They told me I
didn’t know anything (that’s why I was asking questions), and that I
was a mere journalist (the validity of a question depends on its
source rather than its content).
But they didn’t answer the questions. They ducked and dodged and
evaded. After thirty years in journalism, I know ducking and
dodging when I see it. It was like cross-examining hostile
witnesses. I tried to force the issue, pointing out that the available
answers were “Yes,” “No,” “I don’t know,” or “The question is not
legitimate,” followed by any desired discussion. Still no straight
answer. They would neither tell me of what the early oceans
consisted, nor admit that they didn’t know.
This is the behavior not of scientists, but of advocates, of True
Believers. I used to think that science was about asking questions,
not about defending things you didn’t really know. Religion, I
thought, was the other way around. I guess I was wrong.Practical Questions
A few things that worry those who are not doctrinaire evolutionists.
(Incidentally, it is worth noting that by no means all involved in the
life sciences are doctrinaire. A friend of mine, a (Jewish, atheist)
biochemist, says “It doesn’t make sense.” He may be wrong, but a
Creationist he isn’t.)
To work, a theory presumably must (a) be internally consistent and
(b) map onto reality. You have to have both. Classical mechanics
for example is (so far as I know) internally consistent, but is not at
all points congruent with reality. Evolution has a great deal of
elaborate, Protean, and often fuzzy theory. How closely does it
correspond to what we actually see? Do the sweeping principles fit
the grubby details?
For example, how did a giraffe get a long neck? One reads as a
matter of vague philosophical principle that a proto-giraffe by
chance happened to be taller than its herdmates, could eat more
altitudinous leaves than its confreres, was therefore better fed,
consequently rutted with abandon, and produced more child
giraffes of height. This felicitous adaptation therefore spread and
we ended up…well, up—with taller giraffes. It sounds reasonable.
In evolution that is enough.
But what are the practical details? Do we have an unambiguous
record of giraffes with longer and longer necks? (Maybe we do. I’m
just asking.) Presumably modern giraffes have more vertebrae then
did proto-giraffes. (The alternative is the same number of
vertebrae, but longer ones. I have known giraffes. They were
flexible rather than hinged.) This, note, requires a structural
change as distinct from an increase in size.
Evolution is said to proceed by the accretion of successful point
mutations. Does a random point mutation cause the appearance of
an extra vertebra? If so, which mutation? (It would have to be a
pretty vigorous point mutation.) How can you tell, given that we
have no DNA from proto-giraffes? If not one, then how many
random point mutations? Which ones? What virtue did these have
that they were conserved until all were present? Did this happen
once per additional vertebra—the multiply repeated chance
appearance of identical mutations? Or did they appear all at once?
If so, the heart must have changed simultaneously to get blood
way up there.
[After I posted this a reader wrote to say that giraffes do have
longer instead of more vertebra. Substitute "a snake" for " giraffe,"
snakes sometimes having hundrds of vertebrae, and the same
questions questions hold.]
There may be perfectly good, clear, demonstrable answers to a few
of these questions. I’m not a paleontological giraffologist. But if
evolutionists want people to accept evolution, they need to provide
answers—clear, concrete, non-metaphysical answers without
gaping logical lacunae. They do not. When passionate believers do
not provide answers that would substantiate their assertions, a
reasonable presumption is that they do not have them.The matter of the giraffe is a simple example of a question that
inevitably occurs to the independently thoughtful: How do you get
evolutionarily from A to B? Can you get from A to B by the
mechanisms assumed? Without practical details, evolution looks
like an assertion that the better survives the worse; throw in
ionizing radiation and such to provide things to do the surviving,
and we’re off to the races. But…can we get there from here? Do we
actually know the intermediate steps and the associated genetic
mechanics? If we don’t know what the steps were, can we at least
show unambiguously a series of steps that would work?
Lots of evolutionary changes just don’t look manageable by
random mutation. Some orchestrated jump seems necessary. How
does an animal evolve color vision, given that doing so would
require elaborate changes in eye chemistry, useless without
simultaneous elaborate changes in the brain to interpret the
incoming impulses, which changes would themselves be useless
without the retinal changes?
Or consider caterpillars. A caterpillar has no obvious resemblance
to a butterfly. The disparity in engineering is huge. The caterpillar
has no legs, properly speaking, certainly no wings, no proboscis.
How did a species that did not undergo metamorphosis evolve into
one that did? Pupating looks like something you do well or not at
all: If you don’t turn into something practical at the end, you don’t
get another chance. Think about this. The ancestor of a modern caterpillar necessarily
was something that could reproduce already. To get to be a
butterfly-producing sort of organism, it would have to evolve silk-
extruding organs, since they are what you make a cocoon with. OK,
maybe it did this to tie leaves together, or maybe the beast
resembled a tent-caterpillar. (Again, plausibility over evidence.)
Then some mutation caused it to wrap itself experimentally in silk.
(What mutation? Are we serious?) It then died, wrapped, because it
had no machinery to cause it to undergo the fantastically complex
transformation into a butterfly. Death is usually a discouragement
to reproduction.
Tell me how the beast can gradually acquire, by accident, the
capacity gradually to undergo all the formidably elaborate changes
from worm to butterfly, so that each intermediate form is a
practical organism that survives. If evolutionists cannot answer
such questions, the theory fails.
Here the evolutionist will say, “Fred, caterpillars are soft, squashy
things and don’t leave good fossils, so it’s unreasonable to expect
us to find proof.” I see the problem. But it is unreasonable to
expect me to accept something on the grounds that it can’t be
proved. Yes, it is possible that an explanation exists and that we
just haven’t found it. But you can say that of anything whatever. Is
it good science to assume that evidence will be forthcoming
because we sure would like it to be? I’ll gladly give you evidence
Wednesday for a theory today?
Note that I am not asking evolutionists to give detailed mechanics
for the evolution of everything that lives. If they gave convincing
evidence for a few of the hard cases—proof of principle, so to
speak--I would be inclined to believe that equally good evidence
existed for the others. But they haven’t.
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Evolution, Like Gaul, Is Divided Into Three Parts
Evolution breaks down into at least three logically separable
components: First, that life arose by chemical accident; second,
that it then evolved into the life we see today; and third, that the
mechanism was the accretion of chance mutations. Evolutionists,
not particularly logical, refuse to see this separability.
The first, chance formation of life, simply hasn’t been established.
It isn’t science, but faith.
The second proposition, that life, having arisen by unknown
means, then evolved into the life of today, is more solid. In very old
rocks you find fish, then things, like coelacanth and the
ichthyostega, that look like transitional forms, and finally us. They
seem to have gotten from A to B somehow. A process of evolution,
however driven, looks reasonable. It is hard to imagine that they
appeared magically from nowhere, one after the other.
The third proposition, that the mechanism of evolutions is chance
mutation, though sacrosanct among its proponents, is shaky. If it
cannot account for the simultaneous appearance of complex,
functionally interdependent characteristics, as in the case of
caterpillars, it fails. Thus far, it hasn’t accounted for them.
It is interesting to note that evolutionists switch stories regarding
the mechanism of transformation. The standard Neo-Darwinian
view is that evolution proceeds very slowly. But when it proves
impossible to find evidence of gradual evolution, some
evolutionists turn to “punctuated equilibrium,” (2) which says that
evolution happens by sudden undetectable spurts. The idea isn’t
foolish, just unestablished. Then there are the evolutionists who, in
opposition to those who maintain that point-mutations continue to
account for evolution, say that now cultural evolution has taken
over.
Finally, when things do not happen according to script—when, for
example, human intelligence appears too rapidly—then we have
the theory of “privileged genes,” which evolved at breakneck speed
because of assumed but unestablished selective pressures. That is,
the existence of the pressures is inferred from the changes, and
then the changes are attributed to the pressures. Oh.
When you have patched a tire too many times, you start thinking
about getting a new tire.The Theory of Implausibility
As previously mentioned, evolutionists depend heavily on
plausibility unabetted by evidence. There is also the matter of
implausibility. Suppose that I showed you two tiny gear wheels,
such as one might find in an old watch, and said, “See? I turn this
little wheel, and the other little wheel turns too. Isn’t that cute?”
You would not find this surprising. Suppose I then showed you a
whole mechanical watch, with thirty little gear wheels and a little
lever that said tickticktick. You would have no trouble accepting
that they all worked together.
If I then told you of a mechanism consisting of a hundred billion
little wheels that worked for seventy years, repairing itself,
wouldn’t you suspect either that I was smoking something really
good—or that something beyond simple mechanics must be
involved?
Evolution writ large is the belief that a cloud of hydrogen will
spontaneously invent extreme-ultraviolet lithography, perform
Swan Lake, and write all the books in the British Museum.
If something looks implausible, it probably is. More Questions on the Fit with Reality
Does the theory, however reasonable and plausible (or not), in fact
map onto what we actually see? A principle of evolution is that
traits conferring fitness become general within a population. Do
they?
Again, consider intelligence. Presumably it increases fitness. (Or
maybe it does. An obvious question is why, if intelligence is
adaptive—i.e., promotes survival--it didn’t evolve earlier; and if it
is not adaptive, why did it evolve at all? You get various
unsubstantiated answers, such as that intelligence is of no use
without an opposable thumb, or speech, or something.)
Those who deal in human evolution usually hold The Bell Curve in
high regard. (So do I. It’s almost as good as Shotgun News or, more
appropriate in this context, the Journal of Irreproducible Results.) A
point the book makes is that in the United States the highly
intelligent tend to go into fields requiring intelligence, as for
example the sciences, computing, and law. They live together,
work together, and marry each other, thus tending to concentrate
intelligence instead of making it general in the population. They
also produce children at below the level of replacement. Perhaps
fitness leads to extinction.Black sub-Saharan Africans (say many evolutionists) have a mean
IQ somewhere near 70, live in wretched poverty, and breed
enthusiastically. White Europeans, reasonably bright at IQ 100 and
quite prosperous, are losing population. Jews, very bright indeed at
a mean IQ of 115 and very prosperous, are positively scarce,
always have been, and seem to be losing ground. From this I
conclude either that (a) intelligence does not increase fitness or (b)
reproduction is inversely proportional to fitness.
I’m being a bit of a smart-ass here, but…the facts really don’t
seem to match the theory.
In human populations, do the fit really reproduce with each other?
It is a matter of daily observation that men prefer cute, sexy
women. It then becomes crucial for evolutionists to show that cute
and sexy are more fit than strong, smart, and ugly. Thus large
breasts are said to produce more milk (Evidence? Chimpanzees
have no breasts yet produce ample milk.) and that broad hips imply
a large birth canal. (But men are not attracted to broad hips, but to
broad hips in conjunction with a narrow waist.) Curvaceous legs are
curvaceous because of underlying muscle, important for fitness.
Of course Chinese women do not have muscular legs or buttocks,
wide hips, or large breasts, and seem to reproduce satisfactorily.
(White and Asian women are more physically delicate than African
women, as witness the lower rates of training injuries among black
women in the American army. Thus European women, said to have
emigrated from Africa and evolved to be Caucasians, lost
sturdiness. Why?)
Then it is said that ugly woman are hypertestosteronal, and
therefore have more spontaneous abortions. A sophomore logic
student with a hangover could point out the problems and unsaid
things in this argument.
There is an air of desperation about all of it. Transparently they
begin with their conclusion and craft their reasoning to reach it.Fast and Faster
To the evolutionarily unbaptised, it seems that evolution might
occur slowly, by the gradual accretion of random point-mutations
over millions of years, but certainly could occur rapidly by the
spread of genes already available in the population. For example,
genes presumably exist among us for the eyes of Ted Williams, the
endurance of marathon runners, the general physical plant of
Mohammed Ali, the intelligence of Gauss, and so on. (This of
course assumes genetic determinism, which not all geneticists
buy.) Are, or were, these becoming general? Perhaps. Show me. If
not, one must conclude either that these qualities do not confer
fitness, or that fitness does not become general. It seems odd to
believe that massive structural changes can occur slowly through
the accumulation of accidental changes, but much more rapid
increases in fitness do not occur through existent genes. Can we
get answers, please? Concrete, non-metaphysical, demonstrable
answers?Consciousness
With evolution the sciences run into the problem of consciousness,
which they are poorly equipped to handle. This is important. You
don’t need to consider consciousness in, say, physical chemistry,
which gives the correct answers without it. But evolution is a study
of living things, of which consciousness is at least sometimes a
quality. Evolutionists know this, and so write unwittingly fatuous
articles on the evolution of consciousness. They believe that they
are being scientific. But…are they?
Obvious questions: What is consciousness? Does it have a derived
definition, like f = ma? Or is it an undefined primitive, like “line” or
“point”? With what instrument do you detect it? Is something either
conscious or not, or do you have shades and degrees? Is a tree
conscious, or a rock? How do you know? Evolution means a
continuous change over time. How do you document such
changes? Do we have fossilized consciousness, consciousness
preserved in amber? Does consciousness have physical existence?
If it does, is it electromagnetic, gravitational, or what? If it doesn’t
have physical existence, what kind of existence does it have? If you cannot define it, detect it, or measure it, how do you study
its evolution, if any? Indeed, how do the sciences, based on
physics, handle the physically undetectable?
Speculation disguised as science never ends. For example, some
say that consciousness is just a side-effect of complexity. How do
they know? Complexity defined how? If a man is conscious because
he’s complex, then a whole room full of people must be even more
conscious, because the total complexity would have to be more
than any one fellow’s complexity. The universe has got to be more
complex than anything in it, so it must be motingator conscious.
Ah, but the crucial questions, though: (Again, the possible answers
are, “Yes,” “No,” “I don’t know,” or “The question doesn’t make
sense.”)
First, does consciousness interact with matter? It seems to. When I
drop a cinder block on my foot, it sure interacts with my
consciousness. And if I consciously tell my hand to move, it does.
Second, if consciousness interacts with matter, then don’t you have
to take it into account in describing physical systems? Vague Plausibility Revisited
Humans are said to have a poor sense of smell because they
evolved to stand upright in the savanna where you can see forever
and don’t need to smell things. This makes no sense: Anyone can
see that the better your senses of smell and hearing, especially at
night but even in daytime if you have lions that look like dirt and
know how to sneak up on things, you are better off. I note that
horses have good vision and eyes at about the same altitude as
ours, but they have great noses.
Then the evolutionist says, well, people’s noses retracted into their
faces, and there wasn’t room for good olfaction. How much
olfactory tissue does a house cat have? They can sure smell things
better than we can. Oh, then says the Evolutionist, a large olfactory
center in the brain would impose too much metabolic strain and
require that people eat more, and so they would die of starvation in
bad times. Evidence? Demonstration?
My favorite example, which does not reach the level of plausibility,
is such artifacts as the tail of a peacock which obviously make the
bird easier to see and eat. So help me, I have several times seen
the assertion that females figure that any male who can survive
such a horrendous disadvantage must really be tough, and
therefore good mating material. The tail increases fitness by
decreasing fitness. A Boy Named Sue.Traits That Ought To Be Dead, But Don’t Seem To Be
Supposedly traits that kill off an animal die out of the population,
and things that help the beast survive spread till they all have
them. That makes sense. But does it happen?
That it does is certainly an article of faith. I once asked a doctor
why Rh negative people stayed in the population. Fifteen percent of
white women are negative, so they are usually going to mate with
positive men, with the consequent possibility that children will
suffer from hemolytic disease. Well, said the doctor, being Rh
negative obviously must have some survival value, or it wouldn’t
exist. (Then why hasn’t it become general? Or is it doing so?) She
simply believed.
She then rolled out sickle-cell anemia, the poster child of
evolution, which is caused by a point mutation on the beta chain of
hemoglobin and, when heterozygous, helps people survive malaria.
Maybe Rh negativity does have some survival value, which can be
shown to be greater than its non-survival value. Maybe asthma
does too, and fatal allergies to bee stings, and migraines,
schizophrenia, panic, cluster headaches, anaphylactic shock in
general, homosexuality in males, allergies, a thousand genetic
diseases, suicide, and so on. (I suppose you could argue that being
a suicide bomber ensures wide dispersal of one’s genetic material.)For that matter, why are there so many traits that have no obvious
value? For example, kidneys have well developed nerves. Kidney
stones are agonizing. Yet there is absolutely nothing an animal can
do about a kidney stone. How do those nerves increase fitness?
Evolutionists don’t ask. Always the question is How does this fit in
with evolution, instead of, Does this fit in with evolution?
Intelligent Design
An interesting thought that drives evolutionists mad is called
Intelligent Design, or ID. It is the view that things that appear to
have been done deliberately might have been. Some look at, say,
the human eye and think, “This looks like really good engineering.
Elaborate retina of twelve layers, marvelously transparent cornea,
pump system to keep the whole thing inflated, suspensory
ligaments, really slick lens, the underlying cell biology. Very
clever.” I gather that a lot of ID folk are in fact Christian apologists trying to
drape Genesis in scientific respectability. That is, things looked to
have been designed, therefore there must be a designer, now will
Yahweh step forward. Yet an idea is not intellectually disreputable
because some of the people who hold it are. The genuine defects
of ID are the lack of a detectible designer, and that evolution
appears to have occurred. This leads some to the thought that
consciousness is involved and evolution may be shaping itself. I
can think of no way to test the idea.
In any event, to anyone of modest rationality, the evolutionist’s
hostility to Intelligent Design is amusing. Many evolutionists argue,
perhaps correctly, that Any Day Now we will create life in the
laboratory, which would be intelligent design. Believing that life
arose by chemical accident, they will argue (reasonably, given their
assumptions) that life must have evolved countless times
throughout the universe. It follows then that, if we will soon be
able to design life, someone else might have designed us. In Conclusion
To evolutionists I say, “I am perfectly willing to believe what you
can actually establish. Reproducibly create life in a test tube, and I
will accept that it can be done. Do it under conditions that
reasonably may have existed long ago, and I will accept as likely
the proposition that such conditions existed and gave rise to life. I
bear no animus against the theory, and champion no competing
creed. But don’t expect me to accept fluid speculation, sloppy
logic, and secular theology.”
I once told my daughters, “Whatever you most ardently believe,
remember that there is another side. Try, however hard it may be,
to put yourself in the shoes of those whose views you most dislike.
Force yourself to make a reasoned argument for their position. Do
that, think long and hard, and conclude as you will. You can do no
better, and you may be surprised.”Notes
(1) An example, for anyone interested, of the sort of unlogic to
which I was exposed by evolutionists: Some simple viruses are
strings of nucleotides in a particular order. In 2002 Eckhard
Wimmer, at the University of New York at Stony Brook, downloaded
the sequence for polio from the internet, bought the necessary
nucleotides from a biological supply house, strung them together,
and got a functioning virus that caused polio in mice. It was a slick
piece of work.
When I ask evolutionists whether the chance creation of life has
been demonstrated in the laboratory, I get email offering Wimmer’s
work as evidence that it has been done. But (even stipulating that
viruses are alive) what Wimmer did was to put OTS nucleotides
together according to a known pattern in a well-equipped
laboratory. This is intelligent design, or at least intelligent
plagiarism. It is not chance anything. At least some of the men who
offered Wimmer’s work as what it wasn’t are far too intelligent not
to see the illogic—except when they are defending the faith.
(2) Many Evolutionists respond to skepticism about life’s starting
by chance by appealing to the vastness of time. “Fred, there were
billions and billions of gallons of ocean, for billions of years, or
billions of generations of spiders or bugs or little funny things with
too many legs, so the odds are in all that time….” Give something
long enough and it has to happen, they say. Maybe. But
probabilities don’t always work they way they look like they ought.
Someone is said to have said that a monkey banging at random on
a typewriter would eventually type all the books in the British
Museum. (Some of the books suggest that this may have
happened, but never mind.) Well, yes. The monkey would. But it
could be a wait. The size of the wait is worth pondering.
Let’s consider the chance that the chimp would type a particular
book. To make the arithmetic easy, let’s take a bestseller with
200,000 words. By a common newspaper estimate of five letters
per word on average, that’s a million letters. What’s the chance the
monkey will get the book in a given string of a million characters?
For simplicity, assume a keyboard of 100 keys. The monkey has a
1/100 chance of getting the first letter, times 1/100 of getting the
second letter, and so on. His chance of getting the book is
therefore one in 1 in 100 exp 1,000,000, or 1 in 10 exp 2,000,000.
(I don’t offhand know log 3 but, thirty being greater than ten, a
30-character keyboard would give well in excess of 10 exp
1,000,000.)
Now, let’s be fair to the Bandar Log. Instead of one monkey, let’s
use 10 exp 100 monkeys. Given that the number of subatomic
particles in the universe is supposed to be 10 exp 87 (or
something), that seems to be a fair dose of monkeys. (I picture a
cowering electron surrounded by 10 exp 13 monkeys.) Let’s say
they type 10 exp 10 characters per second per each, for 10 exp
100 seconds which, considering that the age of the universe (I read
somewhere) is 10 exp 18 seconds, seems more than fair.
Do the arithmetic. For practical purposes, those monkeys have no
more chance of getting the book than the single monkey had,
which, for practical purposes, was none.
Now, I don’t suggest that the foregoing calculation has any direct
application to the chance formation of life. (I will get seriously
stupid email from people who ignore the foregoing sentence.) But
neither do I know that the chance appearance of a cell does not
involve paralyzing improbabilities. Without unambiguous numbers
arising from unarguable assumptions, invoking time as a substitute
for knowledge can be hazardous.(the following are live links if you would care to go to Fred's site
and follow them, Montag)Life Evolves In Deep Sediments
Privileged Genes
Punctuated Equilibrium
Evolutionary PsychologyCraig Venter Questions Genetic DeterminismEndhttp://fredoneverything.net/FOE_Frame_Column.htm
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Fredwin On EvolutionVery Long, Will Bore Hell Out Of Most People, But I Felt Like Doing
ItMarch 7, 2005I was about fifteen when I began to think about evolution. I was
then just discovering the sciences systematically, and took them as
what they offered themselves to be, a realm of reason and
dispassionate regard for truth. There was a hard-edged clarity to
them that I liked. You got real answers. Since evolution depended
on such sciences as chemistry, I regarded it as also being a
science.
The question of the origin of life interested me. The evolutionary
explanations that I encountered in textbooks of biology ran to, “In
primeval seas, evaporation concentrated dissolved compounds in a
pore in a rock, a skim formed a membrane, and life began its
immense journey.” I saw no reason to doubt this. If it hadn’t been
true, scientists would not have said that it was.
Remember, I was fifteen.
In those days I read Scientific American and New Scientist, the
latter then still being thoughtfully written in good English. I noticed
that not infrequently they offered differing speculation as to the
origin of life. The belief in the instrumentality of chemical accident
was constant, but the nature of the primeval soup changed to fit
varying attempts at explanation.
For a while, life was thought to have come about on clay in shallow
water in seas of a particular composition, later in tidal pools with
another chemical solution, then in the open ocean in another
solution. This continues. Recently, geothermal vents have been
offered as the home of the first life. Today (Feb 24, 2005) on the
BBC website, I learn that life evolved below the oceanic floor.
(“There is evidence that life evolved in the deep sediments," co-
author John Parkes, of Cardiff University, UK, told the BBC News
website.” Link at bottom.)
The frequent shifting of ground bothered me. If we knew how life
began, why did we have so many prospective mechanisms, none of
which really worked? Evolution began to look like a theory in search
of a soup. Forty-five years later, it still does.Questions Arise
I was probably in college when I found myself asking what seemed
to me straightforward questions about the chemical origin of life.
In particular:
(1) Life was said to have begun by chemical inadvertence in the
early seas. Did we, I wondered, really know of what those early
seas consisted? Know, not suspect, hope, theorize, divine,
speculate, or really, really wish.
The answer was, and is, “no.” We have no dried residue, no
remaining pools, and the science of planetogenesis isn’t nearly
good enough to provide a quantitative analysis.
(2) Had the creation of a living cell been replicated in the
laboratory? No, it hadn’t, and hasn’t. (Note 1)
(3) Did we know what conditions were necessary for a cell to come
about? No, we didn’t, and don’t.
(4) Could it be shown to be mathematically probable that a cell
would form, given any soup whatever? No, it couldn’t, and can’t.
(At least not without cooking the assumptions.) (Note 2)
Well, I thought, sophomore chemistry major that I then was: If we
don’t know what conditions existed, or what conditions are
necessary, and can’t reproduce the event in the laboratory, and
can’t show it to be statistically probable—why are we so very sure
that it happened? Would you hang a man on such evidence?
My point was not that evolutionists were necessarily wrong. I
simply didn’t see the evidence. While they couldn’t demonstrate
that life had begun by chemical accident, I couldn’t show that it
hadn’t. An inability to prove that something is statistically possible
is not the same as proving that it is not possible. Not being able to
reproduce an event in the laboratory does not establish that it
didn’t happen in nature. Etc.
I just didn’t know how life came about. I still don’t. Neither do
evolutionists.
What Distinguishes Evolution from Other Science
Early on, I noticed three things about evolution that differentiated it
from other sciences (or, I could almost say, from science). First,
plausibility was accepted as being equivalent to evidence. (And of
course the less you know, the greater the number of things that
are plausible, because there are fewer facts to get in the way.)
Again and again evolutionists assumed that suggesting how
something might have happened was equivalent to establishing
how it had happened. Asking them for evidence usually aroused
annoyance and sometimes, if persisted in, hostility.
As an example, it seems plausible to evolutionists that life arose by
chemical misadventure. By this they mean (I think) that they cannot
imagine how else it might have come about. (Neither can I. Does
one accept a poor explanation because unable to think of a good
one?) This accidental-life theory, being somewhat plausible, is
therefore accepted without the usual standards of science, such as
reproducibility or rigorous demonstration of mathematical
feasibility. Putting it otherwise, evolutionists are too attached to
their ideas to be able to question them.
Consequently, discussion often turns to vague and murky
assertion. Starlings are said to have evolved to be the color of dirt
so that hawks can’t see them to eat them. This is plausible. But
guacamayos and cockatoos are gaudy enough to be seen from
low-earth orbit. Is there a contradiction here? No, say evolutionists.
Guacamayos are gaudy so they can find each other to mate. Always
there is the pat explanation. But starlings seem to mate with great
success, though invisible. If you have heard a guacamayo shriek,
you can hardly doubt that another one could easily find it.
Enthusiasts of evolution then told me that guacamayos were at the
top of their food chain, and didn’t have predators. Or else that the
predators were colorblind. On and on it goes. But…is any of this
established?Second, evolution seemed more a metaphysics or ideology than a
science. The sciences, as I knew them, gave clear answers.
Evolution involved intense faith in fuzzy principles. You
demonstrated chemistry, but believed evolution. If you have ever
debated a Marxist, or a serious liberal or conservative, or a feminist
or Christian, you will have noticed that, although they can be
exceedingly bright and well informed, they display a maddening
imprecision. You never get a straight answer if it is one they do not
want to give. Nothing is ever firmly established. Crucial assertions
do not tie to observable reality. Invariably the Marxist (or
evolutionist) assumes that a detailed knowledge of economic
conditions under the reign of Nicholas II or whatever substitutes
for being able to answer simple questions, such as why Marxism
has never worked: the Fallacy of Irrelevant Knowledge. And of
course almost anything can be made believable by considering only
favorable evidence and interpreting hard.Third, evolutionists are obsessed by Christianity and Creationism,
with which they imagine themselves to be in mortal combat. This is
peculiar to them. Note that other sciences, such as astronomy and
geology, even archaeology, are equally threatened by the notion
that the world was created in 4004 BC. Astronomers pay not the
slightest attention to creationist ideas. Nobody does—except
evolutionists. We are dealing with competing religions—
overarching explanations of origin and destiny. Thus the fury of
their response to skepticism.
I found it pointless to tell them that I wasn’t a Creationist. They
refused to believe it. If they had, they would have had to answer
questions that they would rather avoid. Like any zealots, they
cannot recognize their own zealotry. Thus their constant
classification of skeptics as enemies (a word they often use)—of
truth, of science, of Darwin, of progress.
This tactical demonization is not unique to evolution. “Creationist”
is to evolution what “racist” is to politics: A way of preventing
discussion of what you do not want to discuss. Evolution is the
political correctness of science.
The Lair of the Beast
I have been on several lists on the internet that deal with matters
such as evolution, have written on the subject, and have discussed
evolution with various of its adherents. These men (almost all of
them are) have frequently been very bright indeed, often Ivy League
professors, some of them with names you would recognize. They
are not amateurs of evolution or high-school principals in Kansas
eager to prove their modernity. I asked them the questions in the
foregoing (about whether we really know what the primeval seas
consisted of, etc.) I knew the answers; I wanted to see how serious
proponents of evolutionary biology would respond to awkward
questions. It was like giving a bobcat a prostate exam. I got everything but
answers. They told me I was a crank, implied over and over that I
was a Creationist, said that I was an enemy of science (someone
who asks for evidence is an enemy of science). They said that I was
trying to pull down modern biology (if you ask questions about an
aspect of biology, you want to pull down biology). They told me I
didn’t know anything (that’s why I was asking questions), and that I
was a mere journalist (the validity of a question depends on its
source rather than its content).
But they didn’t answer the questions. They ducked and dodged and
evaded. After thirty years in journalism, I know ducking and
dodging when I see it. It was like cross-examining hostile
witnesses. I tried to force the issue, pointing out that the available
answers were “Yes,” “No,” “I don’t know,” or “The question is not
legitimate,” followed by any desired discussion. Still no straight
answer. They would neither tell me of what the early oceans
consisted, nor admit that they didn’t know.
This is the behavior not of scientists, but of advocates, of True
Believers. I used to think that science was about asking questions,
not about defending things you didn’t really know. Religion, I
thought, was the other way around. I guess I was wrong.Practical Questions
A few things that worry those who are not doctrinaire evolutionists.
(Incidentally, it is worth noting that by no means all involved in the
life sciences are doctrinaire. A friend of mine, a (Jewish, atheist)
biochemist, says “It doesn’t make sense.” He may be wrong, but a
Creationist he isn’t.)
To work, a theory presumably must (a) be internally consistent and
(b) map onto reality. You have to have both. Classical mechanics
for example is (so far as I know) internally consistent, but is not at
all points congruent with reality. Evolution has a great deal of
elaborate, Protean, and often fuzzy theory. How closely does it
correspond to what we actually see? Do the sweeping principles fit
the grubby details?
For example, how did a giraffe get a long neck? One reads as a
matter of vague philosophical principle that a proto-giraffe by
chance happened to be taller than its herdmates, could eat more
altitudinous leaves than its confreres, was therefore better fed,
consequently rutted with abandon, and produced more child
giraffes of height. This felicitous adaptation therefore spread and
we ended up…well, up—with taller giraffes. It sounds reasonable.
In evolution that is enough.
But what are the practical details? Do we have an unambiguous
record of giraffes with longer and longer necks? (Maybe we do. I’m
just asking.) Presumably modern giraffes have more vertebrae then
did proto-giraffes. (The alternative is the same number of
vertebrae, but longer ones. I have known giraffes. They were
flexible rather than hinged.) This, note, requires a structural
change as distinct from an increase in size.
Evolution is said to proceed by the accretion of successful point
mutations. Does a random point mutation cause the appearance of
an extra vertebra? If so, which mutation? (It would have to be a
pretty vigorous point mutation.) How can you tell, given that we
have no DNA from proto-giraffes? If not one, then how many
random point mutations? Which ones? What virtue did these have
that they were conserved until all were present? Did this happen
once per additional vertebra—the multiply repeated chance
appearance of identical mutations? Or did they appear all at once?
If so, the heart must have changed simultaneously to get blood
way up there.
[After I posted this a reader wrote to say that giraffes do have
longer instead of more vertebra. Substitute "a snake" for " giraffe,"
snakes sometimes having hundrds of vertebrae, and the same
questions questions hold.]
There may be perfectly good, clear, demonstrable answers to a few
of these questions. I’m not a paleontological giraffologist. But if
evolutionists want people to accept evolution, they need to provide
answers—clear, concrete, non-metaphysical answers without
gaping logical lacunae. They do not. When passionate believers do
not provide answers that would substantiate their assertions, a
reasonable presumption is that they do not have them.The matter of the giraffe is a simple example of a question that
inevitably occurs to the independently thoughtful: How do you get
evolutionarily from A to B? Can you get from A to B by the
mechanisms assumed? Without practical details, evolution looks
like an assertion that the better survives the worse; throw in
ionizing radiation and such to provide things to do the surviving,
and we’re off to the races. But…can we get there from here? Do we
actually know the intermediate steps and the associated genetic
mechanics? If we don’t know what the steps were, can we at least
show unambiguously a series of steps that would work?
Lots of evolutionary changes just don’t look manageable by
random mutation. Some orchestrated jump seems necessary. How
does an animal evolve color vision, given that doing so would
require elaborate changes in eye chemistry, useless without
simultaneous elaborate changes in the brain to interpret the
incoming impulses, which changes would themselves be useless
without the retinal changes?
Or consider caterpillars. A caterpillar has no obvious resemblance
to a butterfly. The disparity in engineering is huge. The caterpillar
has no legs, properly speaking, certainly no wings, no proboscis.
How did a species that did not undergo metamorphosis evolve into
one that did? Pupating looks like something you do well or not at
all: If you don’t turn into something practical at the end, you don’t
get another chance. Think about this. The ancestor of a modern caterpillar necessarily
was something that could reproduce already. To get to be a
butterfly-producing sort of organism, it would have to evolve silk-
extruding organs, since they are what you make a cocoon with. OK,
maybe it did this to tie leaves together, or maybe the beast
resembled a tent-caterpillar. (Again, plausibility over evidence.)
Then some mutation caused it to wrap itself experimentally in silk.
(What mutation? Are we serious?) It then died, wrapped, because it
had no machinery to cause it to undergo the fantastically complex
transformation into a butterfly. Death is usually a discouragement
to reproduction.
Tell me how the beast can gradually acquire, by accident, the
capacity gradually to undergo all the formidably elaborate changes
from worm to butterfly, so that each intermediate form is a
practical organism that survives. If evolutionists cannot answer
such questions, the theory fails.
Here the evolutionist will say, “Fred, caterpillars are soft, squashy
things and don’t leave good fossils, so it’s unreasonable to expect
us to find proof.” I see the problem. But it is unreasonable to
expect me to accept something on the grounds that it can’t be
proved. Yes, it is possible that an explanation exists and that we
just haven’t found it. But you can say that of anything whatever. Is
it good science to assume that evidence will be forthcoming
because we sure would like it to be? I’ll gladly give you evidence
Wednesday for a theory today?
Note that I am not asking evolutionists to give detailed mechanics
for the evolution of everything that lives. If they gave convincing
evidence for a few of the hard cases—proof of principle, so to
speak--I would be inclined to believe that equally good evidence
existed for the others. But they haven’t.
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Evolution, Like Gaul, Is Divided Into Three Parts
Evolution breaks down into at least three logically separable
components: First, that life arose by chemical accident; second,
that it then evolved into the life we see today; and third, that the
mechanism was the accretion of chance mutations. Evolutionists,
not particularly logical, refuse to see this separability.
The first, chance formation of life, simply hasn’t been established.
It isn’t science, but faith.
The second proposition, that life, having arisen by unknown
means, then evolved into the life of today, is more solid. In very old
rocks you find fish, then things, like coelacanth and the
ichthyostega, that look like transitional forms, and finally us. They
seem to have gotten from A to B somehow. A process of evolution,
however driven, looks reasonable. It is hard to imagine that they
appeared magically from nowhere, one after the other.
The third proposition, that the mechanism of evolutions is chance
mutation, though sacrosanct among its proponents, is shaky. If it
cannot account for the simultaneous appearance of complex,
functionally interdependent characteristics, as in the case of
caterpillars, it fails. Thus far, it hasn’t accounted for them.
It is interesting to note that evolutionists switch stories regarding
the mechanism of transformation. The standard Neo-Darwinian
view is that evolution proceeds very slowly. But when it proves
impossible to find evidence of gradual evolution, some
evolutionists turn to “punctuated equilibrium,” (2) which says that
evolution happens by sudden undetectable spurts. The idea isn’t
foolish, just unestablished. Then there are the evolutionists who, in
opposition to those who maintain that point-mutations continue to
account for evolution, say that now cultural evolution has taken
over.
Finally, when things do not happen according to script—when, for
example, human intelligence appears too rapidly—then we have
the theory of “privileged genes,” which evolved at breakneck speed
because of assumed but unestablished selective pressures. That is,
the existence of the pressures is inferred from the changes, and
then the changes are attributed to the pressures. Oh.
When you have patched a tire too many times, you start thinking
about getting a new tire.The Theory of Implausibility
As previously mentioned, evolutionists depend heavily on
plausibility unabetted by evidence. There is also the matter of
implausibility. Suppose that I showed you two tiny gear wheels,
such as one might find in an old watch, and said, “See? I turn this
little wheel, and the other little wheel turns too. Isn’t that cute?”
You would not find this surprising. Suppose I then showed you a
whole mechanical watch, with thirty little gear wheels and a little
lever that said tickticktick. You would have no trouble accepting
that they all worked together.
If I then told you of a mechanism consisting of a hundred billion
little wheels that worked for seventy years, repairing itself,
wouldn’t you suspect either that I was smoking something really
good—or that something beyond simple mechanics must be
involved?
Evolution writ large is the belief that a cloud of hydrogen will
spontaneously invent extreme-ultraviolet lithography, perform
Swan Lake, and write all the books in the British Museum.
If something looks implausible, it probably is. More Questions on the Fit with Reality
Does the theory, however reasonable and plausible (or not), in fact
map onto what we actually see? A principle of evolution is that
traits conferring fitness become general within a population. Do
they?
Again, consider intelligence. Presumably it increases fitness. (Or
maybe it does. An obvious question is why, if intelligence is
adaptive—i.e., promotes survival--it didn’t evolve earlier; and if it
is not adaptive, why did it evolve at all? You get various
unsubstantiated answers, such as that intelligence is of no use
without an opposable thumb, or speech, or something.)
Those who deal in human evolution usually hold The Bell Curve in
high regard. (So do I. It’s almost as good as Shotgun News or, more
appropriate in this context, the Journal of Irreproducible Results.) A
point the book makes is that in the United States the highly
intelligent tend to go into fields requiring intelligence, as for
example the sciences, computing, and law. They live together,
work together, and marry each other, thus tending to concentrate
intelligence instead of making it general in the population. They
also produce children at below the level of replacement. Perhaps
fitness leads to extinction.Black sub-Saharan Africans (say many evolutionists) have a mean
IQ somewhere near 70, live in wretched poverty, and breed
enthusiastically. White Europeans, reasonably bright at IQ 100 and
quite prosperous, are losing population. Jews, very bright indeed at
a mean IQ of 115 and very prosperous, are positively scarce,
always have been, and seem to be losing ground. From this I
conclude either that (a) intelligence does not increase fitness or (b)
reproduction is inversely proportional to fitness.
I’m being a bit of a smart-ass here, but…the facts really don’t
seem to match the theory.
In human populations, do the fit really reproduce with each other?
It is a matter of daily observation that men prefer cute, sexy
women. It then becomes crucial for evolutionists to show that cute
and sexy are more fit than strong, smart, and ugly. Thus large
breasts are said to produce more milk (Evidence? Chimpanzees
have no breasts yet produce ample milk.) and that broad hips imply
a large birth canal. (But men are not attracted to broad hips, but to
broad hips in conjunction with a narrow waist.) Curvaceous legs are
curvaceous because of underlying muscle, important for fitness.
Of course Chinese women do not have muscular legs or buttocks,
wide hips, or large breasts, and seem to reproduce satisfactorily.
(White and Asian women are more physically delicate than African
women, as witness the lower rates of training injuries among black
women in the American army. Thus European women, said to have
emigrated from Africa and evolved to be Caucasians, lost
sturdiness. Why?)
Then it is said that ugly woman are hypertestosteronal, and
therefore have more spontaneous abortions. A sophomore logic
student with a hangover could point out the problems and unsaid
things in this argument.
There is an air of desperation about all of it. Transparently they
begin with their conclusion and craft their reasoning to reach it.Fast and Faster
To the evolutionarily unbaptised, it seems that evolution might
occur slowly, by the gradual accretion of random point-mutations
over millions of years, but certainly could occur rapidly by the
spread of genes already available in the population. For example,
genes presumably exist among us for the eyes of Ted Williams, the
endurance of marathon runners, the general physical plant of
Mohammed Ali, the intelligence of Gauss, and so on. (This of
course assumes genetic determinism, which not all geneticists
buy.) Are, or were, these becoming general? Perhaps. Show me. If
not, one must conclude either that these qualities do not confer
fitness, or that fitness does not become general. It seems odd to
believe that massive structural changes can occur slowly through
the accumulation of accidental changes, but much more rapid
increases in fitness do not occur through existent genes. Can we
get answers, please? Concrete, non-metaphysical, demonstrable
answers?Consciousness
With evolution the sciences run into the problem of consciousness,
which they are poorly equipped to handle. This is important. You
don’t need to consider consciousness in, say, physical chemistry,
which gives the correct answers without it. But evolution is a study
of living things, of which consciousness is at least sometimes a
quality. Evolutionists know this, and so write unwittingly fatuous
articles on the evolution of consciousness. They believe that they
are being scientific. But…are they?
Obvious questions: What is consciousness? Does it have a derived
definition, like f = ma? Or is it an undefined primitive, like “line” or
“point”? With what instrument do you detect it? Is something either
conscious or not, or do you have shades and degrees? Is a tree
conscious, or a rock? How do you know? Evolution means a
continuous change over time. How do you document such
changes? Do we have fossilized consciousness, consciousness
preserved in amber? Does consciousness have physical existence?
If it does, is it electromagnetic, gravitational, or what? If it doesn’t
have physical existence, what kind of existence does it have? If you cannot define it, detect it, or measure it, how do you study
its evolution, if any? Indeed, how do the sciences, based on
physics, handle the physically undetectable?
Speculation disguised as science never ends. For example, some
say that consciousness is just a side-effect of complexity. How do
they know? Complexity defined how? If a man is conscious because
he’s complex, then a whole room full of people must be even more
conscious, because the total complexity would have to be more
than any one fellow’s complexity. The universe has got to be more
complex than anything in it, so it must be motingator conscious.
Ah, but the crucial questions, though: (Again, the possible answers
are, “Yes,” “No,” “I don’t know,” or “The question doesn’t make
sense.”)
First, does consciousness interact with matter? It seems to. When I
drop a cinder block on my foot, it sure interacts with my
consciousness. And if I consciously tell my hand to move, it does.
Second, if consciousness interacts with matter, then don’t you have
to take it into account in describing physical systems? Vague Plausibility Revisited
Humans are said to have a poor sense of smell because they
evolved to stand upright in the savanna where you can see forever
and don’t need to smell things. This makes no sense: Anyone can
see that the better your senses of smell and hearing, especially at
night but even in daytime if you have lions that look like dirt and
know how to sneak up on things, you are better off. I note that
horses have good vision and eyes at about the same altitude as
ours, but they have great noses.
Then the evolutionist says, well, people’s noses retracted into their
faces, and there wasn’t room for good olfaction. How much
olfactory tissue does a house cat have? They can sure smell things
better than we can. Oh, then says the Evolutionist, a large olfactory
center in the brain would impose too much metabolic strain and
require that people eat more, and so they would die of starvation in
bad times. Evidence? Demonstration?
My favorite example, which does not reach the level of plausibility,
is such artifacts as the tail of a peacock which obviously make the
bird easier to see and eat. So help me, I have several times seen
the assertion that females figure that any male who can survive
such a horrendous disadvantage must really be tough, and
therefore good mating material. The tail increases fitness by
decreasing fitness. A Boy Named Sue.Traits That Ought To Be Dead, But Don’t Seem To Be
Supposedly traits that kill off an animal die out of the population,
and things that help the beast survive spread till they all have
them. That makes sense. But does it happen?
That it does is certainly an article of faith. I once asked a doctor
why Rh negative people stayed in the population. Fifteen percent of
white women are negative, so they are usually going to mate with
positive men, with the consequent possibility that children will
suffer from hemolytic disease. Well, said the doctor, being Rh
negative obviously must have some survival value, or it wouldn’t
exist. (Then why hasn’t it become general? Or is it doing so?) She
simply believed.
She then rolled out sickle-cell anemia, the poster child of
evolution, which is caused by a point mutation on the beta chain of
hemoglobin and, when heterozygous, helps people survive malaria.
Maybe Rh negativity does have some survival value, which can be
shown to be greater than its non-survival value. Maybe asthma
does too, and fatal allergies to bee stings, and migraines,
schizophrenia, panic, cluster headaches, anaphylactic shock in
general, homosexuality in males, allergies, a thousand genetic
diseases, suicide, and so on. (I suppose you could argue that being
a suicide bomber ensures wide dispersal of one’s genetic material.)For that matter, why are there so many traits that have no obvious
value? For example, kidneys have well developed nerves. Kidney
stones are agonizing. Yet there is absolutely nothing an animal can
do about a kidney stone. How do those nerves increase fitness?
Evolutionists don’t ask. Always the question is How does this fit in
with evolution, instead of, Does this fit in with evolution?
Intelligent Design
An interesting thought that drives evolutionists mad is called
Intelligent Design, or ID. It is the view that things that appear to
have been done deliberately might have been. Some look at, say,
the human eye and think, “This looks like really good engineering.
Elaborate retina of twelve layers, marvelously transparent cornea,
pump system to keep the whole thing inflated, suspensory
ligaments, really slick lens, the underlying cell biology. Very
clever.” I gather that a lot of ID folk are in fact Christian apologists trying to
drape Genesis in scientific respectability. That is, things looked to
have been designed, therefore there must be a designer, now will
Yahweh step forward. Yet an idea is not intellectually disreputable
because some of the people who hold it are. The genuine defects
of ID are the lack of a detectible designer, and that evolution
appears to have occurred. This leads some to the thought that
consciousness is involved and evolution may be shaping itself. I
can think of no way to test the idea.
In any event, to anyone of modest rationality, the evolutionist’s
hostility to Intelligent Design is amusing. Many evolutionists argue,
perhaps correctly, that Any Day Now we will create life in the
laboratory, which would be intelligent design. Believing that life
arose by chemical accident, they will argue (reasonably, given their
assumptions) that life must have evolved countless times
throughout the universe. It follows then that, if we will soon be
able to design life, someone else might have designed us. In Conclusion
To evolutionists I say, “I am perfectly willing to believe what you
can actually establish. Reproducibly create life in a test tube, and I
will accept that it can be done. Do it under conditions that
reasonably may have existed long ago, and I will accept as likely
the proposition that such conditions existed and gave rise to life. I
bear no animus against the theory, and champion no competing
creed. But don’t expect me to accept fluid speculation, sloppy
logic, and secular theology.”
I once told my daughters, “Whatever you most ardently believe,
remember that there is another side. Try, however hard it may be,
to put yourself in the shoes of those whose views you most dislike.
Force yourself to make a reasoned argument for their position. Do
that, think long and hard, and conclude as you will. You can do no
better, and you may be surprised.”Notes
(1) An example, for anyone interested, of the sort of unlogic to
which I was exposed by evolutionists: Some simple viruses are
strings of nucleotides in a particular order. In 2002 Eckhard
Wimmer, at the University of New York at Stony Brook, downloaded
the sequence for polio from the internet, bought the necessary
nucleotides from a biological supply house, strung them together,
and got a functioning virus that caused polio in mice. It was a slick
piece of work.
When I ask evolutionists whether the chance creation of life has
been demonstrated in the laboratory, I get email offering Wimmer’s
work as evidence that it has been done. But (even stipulating that
viruses are alive) what Wimmer did was to put OTS nucleotides
together according to a known pattern in a well-equipped
laboratory. This is intelligent design, or at least intelligent
plagiarism. It is not chance anything. At least some of the men who
offered Wimmer’s work as what it wasn’t are far too intelligent not
to see the illogic—except when they are defending the faith.
(2) Many Evolutionists respond to skepticism about life’s starting
by chance by appealing to the vastness of time. “Fred, there were
billions and billions of gallons of ocean, for billions of years, or
billions of generations of spiders or bugs or little funny things with
too many legs, so the odds are in all that time….” Give something
long enough and it has to happen, they say. Maybe. But
probabilities don’t always work they way they look like they ought.
Someone is said to have said that a monkey banging at random on
a typewriter would eventually type all the books in the British
Museum. (Some of the books suggest that this may have
happened, but never mind.) Well, yes. The monkey would. But it
could be a wait. The size of the wait is worth pondering.
Let’s consider the chance that the chimp would type a particular
book. To make the arithmetic easy, let’s take a bestseller with
200,000 words. By a common newspaper estimate of five letters
per word on average, that’s a million letters. What’s the chance the
monkey will get the book in a given string of a million characters?
For simplicity, assume a keyboard of 100 keys. The monkey has a
1/100 chance of getting the first letter, times 1/100 of getting the
second letter, and so on. His chance of getting the book is
therefore one in 1 in 100 exp 1,000,000, or 1 in 10 exp 2,000,000.
(I don’t offhand know log 3 but, thirty being greater than ten, a
30-character keyboard would give well in excess of 10 exp
1,000,000.)
Now, let’s be fair to the Bandar Log. Instead of one monkey, let’s
use 10 exp 100 monkeys. Given that the number of subatomic
particles in the universe is supposed to be 10 exp 87 (or
something), that seems to be a fair dose of monkeys. (I picture a
cowering electron surrounded by 10 exp 13 monkeys.) Let’s say
they type 10 exp 10 characters per second per each, for 10 exp
100 seconds which, considering that the age of the universe (I read
somewhere) is 10 exp 18 seconds, seems more than fair.
Do the arithmetic. For practical purposes, those monkeys have no
more chance of getting the book than the single monkey had,
which, for practical purposes, was none.
Now, I don’t suggest that the foregoing calculation has any direct
application to the chance formation of life. (I will get seriously
stupid email from people who ignore the foregoing sentence.) But
neither do I know that the chance appearance of a cell does not
involve paralyzing improbabilities. Without unambiguous numbers
arising from unarguable assumptions, invoking time as a substitute
for knowledge can be hazardous.(the following are live links if you would care to go to Fred's site
and follow them, Montag)Life Evolves In Deep Sediments
Privileged Genes
Punctuated Equilibrium
Evolutionary PsychologyCraig Venter Questions Genetic DeterminismEndhttp://fredoneverything.net/FOE_Frame_Column.htm
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“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
