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The Many Myths of Evolution It is
hard to discuss the problems with the theory of evolution because there
are so many theories of evolution. All of them have major problems.
Let's look at them.
Modern
theories of evolution begin with the 18th century French evolutionist
Jean-Baptiste Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de Lamark. In the 1790's he
popularized the idea of "the development or atrophy of organs through
'use or disuse' and their transmission to offspring who inherit these
'acquired characteristics'". 1 His ideas weren't universally accepted
because he could not really explain how or why these characteristics
were passed on. He had a vague notion that they were passed on because
the critter "must" pass them on.
When
a child sees Christmas presents under the tree, the child believes that
Santa must have been there, which proves the existence of Santa Claus.
In the same way, Lamark saw different sized trees, which he took as
evidence that the taller trees must have evolved from shorter trees,
which was his proof of evolution.
Since
the French word Lamark used for "must" (besoin) was translated as
"wants to" in the English translations of his work, English-speaking
critics made fun of his idea that Giant Sequoia trees produced seeds
for taller trees because the trees wanted to have taller offspring.
This criticism wasn't entirely fair. Lamark didn't believe plants had
conscious will. But the criticism stuck because Lamark made no attempt
to explain the evolutionary mechanism. This left his theory of
evolution too c lose to the realm of magic and miracles for scientists
to accept it.
Darwin
revived the theory of evolution by doing what Lamark could not do. He
supplied a plausible mechanism for descent with modification. He
correctly observed: (1) there is a certain amount of variation in
offspring; (2) there are more offspring produced than can survive; (3)
in the fight for survival, the best variants live and the worst
variants die. He correctly concluded that this gradually causes small,
but noticeable, changes in species.
Darwin
then extrapolated this truth into non-truth. He believed that these
gradual changes could continue without limit, resulting in changes so
large that entirely new species would evolve. He believed that when
more fossils were found, the fossil record would show evidence of these
gradual changes. But after more than 130 years of searching, those
fossils have not been found.
Both
Lamark and Darwin believed in pangenesis. According to pangenesis, a
trait acquired by a parent during his or her lifetime could be passed
on to children (Lamarkian or "soft" inheritance). If a man worked to
develop large muscles, for instance, the repeated habit of
weight-lifting would somehow leave a lasting record in the cells of his
body. Particles carrying this information were called "gemmules. " They
would migrate from all parts of the body to the sex cells, whereby they
could be inherited by the offspring. 2
We
now know that acquired characteristics can't be inherited. If you look
at really old issues of National Geographic, you will see pictures of
African women who from early childhood had placed increasingly large
wooden crescents between their teeth and their lips, causing their lips
to stick out several inches by they time the were adults, making them
very beautiful (at least, in the eyes of the African men of that era).
Their daughters, however, were never born with these big, beautiful
lips. Every generation of girls painfully had to acquire large lips
themselves.
Darwin,
who was not a subscriber to National Geographic, didn't know this. He
thought that giraffes who stretched their necks to eat the leaves other
giraffes could not reach would have children with longer necks. The
truth is, acquired characteristics are never inherited.
Suppose
I tried to tell you that if you studied hard and spent a lot of time
thinking, then you would have children who would be smarter and have
bigger brains. You would have good justification for laughing at me. If
I told you that we should eliminate IQ tests and simply measure the
size of a child's head to determine how intelligent he is, you could
legitimately say that is a stupid idea. It is well-known that you can't
tell how smart a man is by measuring the size of his brain. You also
know that knowledge can't be inherited. These are stupid ideas! But see
how these very ideas are used by a UCSC biologist to explain how the
human race evolved:
The force that seems to have accelerated our brain's growth is a new
kind of stimulant: language, signs, collective memories-all elements of
culture. As our cultures evolved in complexities, so did our brains,
which then drove our cultures to still greater complexity. Big and
clever brains led to more complex cultures, which in turn led to bigger
and cleverer brains. 3
In
other words, he claims that exercising our brains makes them stronger,
and that this acquired characteristic is inherited by our children.
This lets them think harder, making them even smarter, and so every
generation gets smarter. The foolish not ion of pangenesis still plays
a part in modern, main-stream evolution.
When
biologists learned more about genetics, and discovered that acquired
characteristics could not be inherited, this dealt a serious blow to
Darwinism. But in 1905, George Romanes recognized that there is a
difference between acquired characteristics and inherited
characteristics. He proposed the theory of Neo-Darwinism, which
asserted that natural selection could operate using only inherited
characteristics. This gave Darwinism a temporary reprieve by replacing
Darwin's erroneous concept of inheritance with a plausible genetic
explanation for differences in offspring.
Natural
selection is simply the process that determines who wins the battle for
survival. It is the filter that removes the inferior individuals and
allows the superior ones to reproduce.
The
mathematical field of statistics and probability can be used to
describe natural variations of things, including populations of living
creatures. If you take the concept of a population of creatures with
small differences (which are the result of inherited characteristics)
and combine it with natural selection you get the Synthetic Theory of
evolution. This theory says that the randomness of variations in
offspring is guided by natural selection producing a gradual genetic
drift towards new, better, more highly-evolved species.
When
people talk about Neo-Darwinsim or Gradualism, they usually are really
talking about the Synthetic Theory. The Synthetic Theory is one of the
two most commonly believed theories of evolution today.
The
Synthetic Theory, however, has some major recognized problems. The
first problem is that the amount of genetic variation in normal
offspring is limited. You can breed thoroughbred horses for speed, but
there is a limit to how fast they can run. Everything we have learned
from breeding dogs, pigeons, cows, pigs, or any another animal, has
shown us that there are limits to the natural variations in animals.
Second,
the Synthetic Theory is absolutely incompatible with the fossil record.
If the Synthetic Theory were true, then the fossil record would
contain, for example, a series of giraffe-like animals. The oldest
would have relatively short legs and necks. The more modern ones would
have longer legs and necks. But the fossil record doesn't show that.
The
real question in the fossil record is not, "What happened to the
dinosaurs?" It is, "Where did the dinosaurs come from?" The fossil
record doesn't show a gradual change from any creature into
Tyrannosaurus Rex, or any other dinosaur.
By
1940 it was clear (to Richard Goldschmidt, at least) that genetic
research had proved that species cannot gradually evolve into other
species, and that the fossil record showed that they had not. Since
Goldschmidt believed that evolution must have happened somehow, he
rejected Darwin's statement that Natura non facit saltum ("Nature does
not make jumps"). He reasoned that a small change in a gene might cause
a large change in a mutant offspring.
Of
course it is true that sometimes five-legged frogs are found living in
polluted streams. Mutant creatures can be radically different from
their parents. Maybe a reptile did once lay an egg, and a bird hatched
out of it. But it isn't very likely.
It
has often been observed that mutations are harmful and rarely, if ever,
beneficial. It is said that two heads are better than one, and
two-headed calves have been born, but two-headed cows have not driven
the one-headed variety into extinction yet.
If
Goldschmidt's Hopeful Monster theory is true, then there had to be
thousands of mutants that each developed into a different species. It
is a hard theory to take seriously. Not very many scientists do.
In
1972, it was still evident from the study of genetics that species
can't gradually evolve into other species, and the fossil record still
showed that species didn't gradually evolve into other species. The
Synthetic Theory was not consistent with scientific data. The only
other options were Lamark's unspecified magic process and Goldschmidt's
Hopeful Monster theory. Neither of these theories were acceptable. So,
Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge proposed the theory of Punctuated
Equilibrium. This popularized Ernst Mayr's earlier idea that
"speciation could occur fairly rapidly in small, isolated populations.
Cut off from the larger gene pool by geographic barriers, a small
amount of variation would be amplified by selection. " 4
The
theory of Punctuated Equilibrium is the other main theory of evolution
that is accepted in evolutionary circles today. Its popularity is due
to the fact that it is consistent with the fossil record (which shows
no evidence of gradual evolution) without resorting to hopeful monsters.
The
problem with this theory is that there isn't any positive evidence to
support it. It claims that gradual evolution happens so quickly, in
such limited areas, that the chances of finding any transitional
fossils is essentially zero. Transitional fossils haven't been found,
which is what the theory of Punctuated Equilibrium predicts. So, the
fossils that haven't been found are claimed as support for the theory.
Many
people think that transitional fossils have been found. They usually
cite the evolution of the horse as an example. The Encyclopedia of
Evolution, which has earned an Ev+ rating because it is highly critical
of creationists in its sections on Flat-Earthers, Fundamentalism,
Scientific Creationism, and Noah's Flood, has a section entitled
"HORSE, EVOLUTION OF Saddled With Errors". (Gee, we wish we'd said
that. ) It says,
[Yale paleontologist Othniel C. ] Marsh's classic (straight-line)
development of the horse became enshrined in every biology textbook and
in a famous exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History. It
showed a sequence of mounted skeletons, each one larger and with a more
well-developed hoof than the last. (The exhibit is now hidden from
public view as an outdated embarrassment. )
Almost a century later, paleontologist George Gaylord Simpson
reexamined horse evolution and concluded that generations of students
had been misled. In his book Horses (1951), he showed that there was no
simple, gradual unilineal development at all.
Marsh arranged his fossils to "lead up" to the one surviving species,
blithely ignoring many inconsistencies and any contradictory evidence. 5
If
you look at the textbooks used at Burroughs High School 6 and Cerro
Coso Community College7, you will see beautiful illustrations showing
the classic straight-line development of the horse are still enshrined
there. I don't know if those science teachers tell their students that
this is an obsolete theory that has been discredited, but both books
present the figures as if this development of the horse is still
believed to be true by paleontologists. It may be possible that
generations of students are still being misled.
One
wonders why these textbooks still use the horse as their showcase
example of a "progressive series of fossils leading from an ancient,
primitive organism, through several intermediate stages, and
culminating in the modern form. " 8 Could it be because they don't have
anything else to offer in its place?
It is
popularly believed that experiments have been done that showed that the
chemicals present in the early Earth's oceans and atmosphere could have
formed amino acids, which could have combined to form proteins, which
eventually turned into the first living cell. This myth arose from the
publication of the results of experiments done by Miller 9 and Fox. 10
On
March 28, 1997, we showed the video. "Is Life Just Chemistry?" in which
Michael Girouard, M. D. , showed that these experiments did not prove
that amino acids and proteins could have formed naturally. In fact,
they prove that life could not have happened that way.
After
we showed the video, our favorite critic complained that we had taken a
cheap shot by bringing up Miller and Fox. He said that those two series
of experiments had been done more than 40 years ago, and that the
errors in them are well known. He said that everybody knows that those
experiments led nowhere, and that no respectable scientists are doing
work along those lines. He said modern research into the origin of life
is taking other approaches, but has not produced any positive results
yet.
We
agree with everything our critic said, except for the part that
"everybody knows" it. It is our position that the general public does
not know that these experiments failed and mistakenly believes that
they succeeded.
One
reason we believe that many people are misinformed is because the
previously mentioned local high school text 11 presents the work of
Miller and Fox as if it were long-established scientific proof of how
life evolved.
The second reason is that
the previously mentioned 1996 college textbook says this:
Organic Molecules Can Be Synthesized Spontaneously under Prebiotic
Conditions In 1953, inspired by the ideas of Oparin and Haldane,
Stanley Miller, a graduate student, and his adviser Harold Urey of the
University of Chicago set out to demonstrate prebiotic evolution in the
laboratory. They mixed water, ammonia, hydrogen, and methane in a flask
and provided energy with heat and electrical charge (to simulate
lightening). They found simple organic molecules appeared after just a
few days (Fig 19-2). In these and similar experiments, Miller and
others have produced amino ac ids, short proteins, nucleotides,
adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and other molecules characteristic of
living things. 12
But even the strongly-biased
Encyclopedia of Evolution admits:
Decades of persistent failure to "create life" by the "spark in the
soup" method (or to find such productions in nature) have caused
researchers to seek other approaches to the great enigma. 13
But
even the most promising, technically sophisticated attempts to
demonstrate the origin of life from nonliving chemicals are still
guesses and gropes in the dark. For almost a century, many scientists
have taught that some version of the "spark in the soup" theory "must"
be true. Repetition of this idea as fact, without sufficient evidence,
has done a disservice to new generations by capping their curiosity
about a profound and open question. 14
To
reputable scientists it may look like we are taking cheap shots at old,
abandoned theories, but we will have to keep shooting until the public
school textbooks abandon them.
Panspermia
is the belief that life could not have started by natural processes on
Earth, so it must have started in outer space. This theory was first
suggested by British astronomer Fred Hoyle in 1978.
Simple
life forms or amino acids may have ridden to Earth on comets or
meteors. Of course, Hoyle recognizes this is no explanation for the
origin of life; it simply moves the problem to another time and place.
15
The
important point is that it moves the problem from a place (the Earth)
where it has been scientifically proven that life could not naturally
originate, to a place (anywhere else in the universe) where one can
imagine any set of fantastic condition s that might be conducive to
prebiotic evolution. That's why evolutionists want to believe so
desperately that meteorite ALH84001 really does contain signs of life.
We
agree that "repetition of this idea [that life could have been caused
by a "spark in the soup"] as fact, without sufficient evidence, has
done a disservice to new generations by capping their curiosity about a
profound and open question. " In fact, we would extend this statement
to say that the repetition of the idea that evolution is a fact,
without sufficient evidence, has done a disservice to the advancement
of science in general. It has prejudiced the reconstruction of fossils
and the interpretation of geology and astronomy. Science will truly
advance when we discard the theory of evolution and examine data
without evolutionary prejudice.
Footnotes:
1. Milner, The
Encyclopedia of Evolution (1993), page 375 (Ev+)
2. Ibid. page 353
3. Wills, The
Runaway Brain (1993), quoted by Richard Leakey, The Origin of Humans
(1994), page 85 (Ev)
4. Milner, The
Encyclopedia of Evolution (1993) page 375 (Ev+)
5. Ibid. page 222
6. Sylvia S.
Mader, Biology 3rd edition (1990), page 306 (Ev)
7. Teresa
Audesirk, Biology 4th edition (1996), page 312 (Ev)
8. Ibid. page 312
9. Stanley L. Miller, "A Production of Amino Acids Under Possible
Primitive Earth Conditions", Science, Vol. 117, No. 3046 (1953) (Ev)
10. Sidney W. Fox and K.
Baal, Molecular Evolution and the Origin of Life, Dover Publishing
(1953) (Ev)
11. Sylvia S. Mader,
Biology 3rd edition (1990), pages 328 - 332 (Ev)
12. Teresa Audesirk,
Biology 4th edition (1996), pages 365-366 (Ev)
13. Milner, The
Encyclopedia of Evolution (1993) page 274 (Ev+)
14. Ibid. page 274
15. Ibid. page 354
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