Title: Intelligent Design vs' Evolution
1Intelligent Design vs. Evolution
- I. Intro
- A. Movie Icons of Evolution
- B. Creationism and Intelligent Design
- II. Icons of Evolution
- Haeckels embryos
- Darwins finches
- Homology
- III. Conclusions
- Science vs. science?
- What is science?
2I.A. Movie Icons of Evolution Things to think
about
- What is said - and what is unsaid
- What might be an alternative explanation?
- Is this statement/argument taken out of context?
- What does the other evidence suggest?
3I.A. Movie Things to think about
- What is said - and what is unsaid
- What might be an alternative explanation?
- Is this statement/argument taken out of context?
- What does the other evidence suggest?
4I.B. Creationism and Intelligent Design
- Creationism Book of Genesis and age of the Earth
- ID Organisms (including humans) created by
supernatural intervention - Opposed to evolution, especially macroevolution
- Spectrum of beliefs
- Literal interpretation of Genesis Science and
religion are irreconcilable - Acceptance of age of earth, but intelligent
design of organisms - Mainstream religion no need for conflict between
religion and scientific discoveries in geology
and evolutionary biology
Skehan 2000, NSTA
5Claims of Intelligent Design
- - Erroneous icons of evolution
- - Irreducible complexity
- - Complexity/specification
6Erroneous Icons of Evolution - Jonathan Wells
- Numerous commonly cited examples of evidence for
evolution are flawed - Textbooks present them anyway
- Scientific dogmatism is trying to prop up
Darwinian evolution in the face of growing
scientific evidence against it. - Concedes
- Microevolution may take place, but not
macroevolution (new species do not emerge)
7Therefore,
- neo-Darwinian theory (evolution by natural
selection) has weak support. - Better science would include possibility of
intelligent design - - i.e., that a higher power created species as
they are.
8Specific examples
- A. Haeckels embryos
- B. Darwins finches
- C. Homology in vertebrate limbs
9Irreducible complexity - Michael Behe
For example - complex biochemical pathways -
complex structures (eyes, flagella) - and
mousetraps...
Massimo Pigliucci, http//fp.bio.utk.edu/skeptic/
lectures.html
10Irreducible complexity? Massimo Pigliucci
John McDonald, http//udel.edu/mcdonald/mousetra
p.html
Massimo Pigliucci, http//fp.bio.utk.edu/skeptic/
lectures.html
113 parts
2 parts
1 part
12The point
- Just because we have a hard time conceiving of it
doesnt mean it couldnt have happened!
13Irreducibly complex eyes? Mollusks
Limpet Patella
Mollusk Pleurotomaria
Nautilus
Marine snail Murex
Squid Loligo
Fig. 24.18
14Complexity/specification - William Dembski
- - random phenomena
- - regular phenomena
- - design (intelligent) complexity and
specification - complexity - not just chance
- specification - not just random, has information
and meaning
15Complexity/specification - William Dembski
- But neglects the possibility of natural
(unintelligent) design - Natural selection can also lead to complex,
specific entities.
16II. Icons of Evolution
- Haeckels embryos
- Darwins finches
- C. Homology in vertebrate limbs
17A. Haeckels embryos
- Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
- Haeckel wasnt an embryologist
From Gishlick http//www.ncseweb.org/icons/icon4h
aeckel.html
18Wells arguments
- Haeckel faked his drawings, but evolutionists
continue to use them anyway. - Haeckel mislabeled the first stages of embryonic
development. - Darwin depended on Haeckel, therefore Darwin was
wrong. - Selective evidence is presented in current
treatments.
19In reply (Alan Gishlick)
- Faked drawings Yes, but modern evolutionary
development in no way depends on Haeckels
drawings - Wrong first stages but different definitions of
embryo in the 1800s (didnt include blastula,
gastrulation). - Darwin depended on Haeckel but Haeckel published
after Darwins first edition (misrepresented
quotations). - Selective evidence But evidence is excellent
that more closely related taxa share more
developmental characteristics (and that was
Darwins main point too!). Textbooks just
present the clearest examples.
http//www.ncseweb.org/icons/icon4haeckel.html
20B. Darwins finches
Fig. 1.17b
21Darwins finches
- Wells evidence against using this example
- - Not instrumental in Darwins formulation of
descent with modification - - Selection oscillates, not directional
- - Hybridization
22Darwins finches
- Evidence against
- - Not instrumental in Darwins formulation of
descent with modification - - Selection oscillates, not directional no net
evolution - - Hybridization
But doesnt account for - long term changes in
climate (likely) - adaptive radiation across
islands (variation in food source)
Fig. 23.13
23Darwins finches
- Evidence against
- - Not instrumental in Darwins formulation of
descent with modification - - Selection oscillates, not directional
- Hybridization most
- species of Darwins finches
- remain distinct primarily
- because of mating behavior.
True - probably fewer biological species (6
rather than 14?) But group is distinct
molecularly - and some species cannot hybridize.
24Homology
Homology - character states that are shared due
to common ancestry
bird wings vs bat wings
Analogy - character states that have a common
function but not a common ancestry
25Homologies Wells Criticisms
Homology is evidence of a common ancestor
- Circular logic
- Similar structures not necessarily coded for by
exactly the same genes - Berras blunder - Corvettes
- Sloppy logic, sloppy teaching
A homology is a similarity in structure or
biochemistry derived from a common ancestor
Wells, 2000
26Which is which?
27Homologies Wells Criticisms
- Circular logic
- Similar structures not necessarily coded for by
exactly the same genes, and vice versa - Berras blunder - Corvettes
- Sloppy logic, sloppy teaching
Wells, 2000
28- Similar structures not necessarily coded for by
exactly the same genes, and vice versa
- But one gene/one function is only simplest
conception. What are some others? - Evidence for
neutral DNA homologies - Abundant evidence for
coding by similar genes for homologous
structures. - But what about vertebrate
limbs? YES! Same family of genes!
E. Max, 2001
Wells, 2000
http//home.earthlink.net/biochemborg/private/Ico
ns/homolog04.htm
29Options
- Wells - evolution is wrong
- Max (2001)
- 1. Meaningless
- 2. Functional constraints (convergent evolution)
- 3. Common descent (supported by collateral
evidence)
http//home.earthlink.net/biochemborg/private/Ico
ns/homolog04.htm
30Homologies Wells Criticisms
- Circular logic
- Similar structures not necessarily coded for by
exactly the same genes - Berras blunder - Corvettes
- Sloppy logic, sloppy teaching
Yep, that was a blunder. But theory of evolution
doesnt at all depend on evidence by
Corvettes! - E. Max 2001
Wells, 2000
31Homologies Wells Criticisms
- Circular logic
- Similar structures not necessarily coded for by
exactly the same genes - Berras blunder - Corvettes
- Sloppy logic, sloppy teaching - see p. 79
How could you tell the difference?
32More to the point, gene duplication, gene
families
- - groups of genes originating from a common
ancestral DNA sequence - - now perform a variety of functions
- Allow for
- - genetic redundancy
- - more freedom for mutation, development of
complexity.
33III. Conclusions
34Intelligent design claims to be scientific, but...
- selective quotations/selective citation -
biased interpretation - errors of omission
doesnt consider broad evidence for specific
examples or evolution in general - doesnt offer
testable alternative hypotheses - motives
scientific discourse or ideology?
35Wells
- - Ph.D. in religious studies, Yale University
- - Ph.D. in molecular and cell biology, UC
Berkeley - - Currently a researcher at the Discovery
Institute - - Follower of Rev. Sun Myung Moons Unification
Church
36Wells
- Father's Moons words, my studies, and my
prayers convinced me that I should devote my life
to destroying Darwinism, just as many of my
fellow Unificationists had already devoted their
lives to destroying Marxism. When Father chose me
(along with about a dozen other seminary
graduates) to enter a Ph.D. program in 1978, I
welcomed the opportunity to prepare myself for
battle.
http//www.tparents.org/library/unification/talks/
wells/DARWIN.htm
37Wells
- In the course of my research I learned (to my
surprise) that biblical chronology played almost
no role in the 19th- century controversiesbetween
religion and evolution, since most theologians
had already accepted geological evidence for the
age of the earth and re-interpreted the days in
Genesis as long periods of time. Instead, the
central issue was design. God created the cosmos
with a plan in mind. This affirmation is among
the most basic in all of Christianity (and other
theistic religions as well, including
Unificationism). And that plan included human
beings as the final outcome of the creative
process we are created in the image of God.
http//www.tparents.org/library/unification/talks/
wells/DARWIN.htm
38B. What is science?
- Testable
- Synthetic - multiple lines of evidence
- Self-correcting is evolution dogmatic?
39What types of questions can science answer?
- Age of earth
- processes taking place within nature
40What types of questions can science not answer?
- What is the role of a supernatural power in
creation? - Example
- - how to test?
- - end of inquiry?
- - how would we learn more about natural
processes if we stopped with a supernatural
explanation whenever there was conflicting
scientific evidence?