The End of Darwinism Part II
by
David A. Noebel
Following
are the last of 14 arguments posited favoring Darwin's theory of evolution
followed by the scientific evidence against each one. The beginning of this
article can been found in the August issue at www.schwarzreport.org.
X.
"George Gaylord Simpson says, 'Some sorts of environments in the Cambrian
[time of the earliest fossils] and others developing since, have persisted
without essential change'" (Macbeth, p. 140).
"The
Cambrian explosion presents a serious challenge to Darwinian evolution. The
event was remarkable because it was so abrupt and extensive--that is, because
it happened so quickly, geologically speaking, and because so many major groups
of animals made their debut in it. . . phyla and classes appeared right at the
start" (Wells, p. 41).
"The
authors of a 1999 booklet also published by the National Academy [of Sciences]
go into more detail: 'The fossil record thus provides consistent evidence of
systematic change through time--of descent with modification.' Yet there is no
mention at all of the Cambrian explosion, or of the paradox it presents for
Darwinian evolution, though both have been well known for over a decade. The
Cambrian explosion even made the cover of Time magazine in 1995" (Wells,
p. 55).
"Darwin
knew that the Cambrian fossil record was a serious problem for his theory. He
also knew that without a mechanism to explain how homologies were produced, his
identification of archetypes with common ancestors remained open to challenge.
Thus it seems to him that neither the fossil record nor homologous structures
supported his theory as conclusively as the evidence from embryology"
(Wells, p. 81).
"The
Cambrian 'explosion' of body plans is perhaps the single most striking feature
of the metazoan fossil record. The rapidity with which phyla and classes
appeared during the early Paleozoic, coupled with much lower rates of
appearance for higher taxa since, poses an outstanding problem in
macroevolution" (Paul Nelson, Applying Design Within Biology,"in
William A. Dembski, editor, Mere Creation: Science, Faith & Intelligent
Design, IVP, 1998, p. 158).
XI.
"By the close of the 1950s, the peppered moth would be the poster child
for evolution--'Darwin's missing evidence'" (Judith Hooper, Of Moths and
Men: The Untold Story of Science and the Peppered Moth, p. 146).
"Darwin
knew of no specific examples from nature to support Natural Selection but
rather argued his case by analogy" (Hooper, p. 23).
"When
the article 'Darwin's missing evidence' by H.B.D. Kettlewell appeared in
Scientific American in the same year [1959], the peppered moths came to the
attention of a popular audience in America for the first time. The
catch-phrases coined in this article--'evolution in action' and 'Darwin's
missing evidence'--would inevitably be repeated verbatim in hundreds of other
articles, and in textbooks" (Hooper, p. 167).
"A
1999 article by Robert Matthews in the London Daily Telegraph began: 'Evolution
experts are quietly admitting that one of their most cherished examples of
Charles Darwin's theory, the rise and fall of the peppered moth, is based on a
series of scientific blunders. Experiments using the moth in the 1950s and long
believed to prove the truth of natural selection are now thought to be
worthless, having been designed to come up with the 'right' answer. Scientists
now admit that they do not know the real explanation for the fate of Biston
betularia, whose story is recounted in almost every textbook on evolution. . .
. Jerry Coyne [professor of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago]
was quoted as saying: 'There is a lot of wishful thinking and design flaws in
them, and they wouldn't get published today'" (Hooper, p. 284, 285).
"The
book, called Melanism: Evolution in Action, was a watershed event. Methodically
and incisively analyzing ev
ery
flaw in Kettlewell's experiments and in the industrial melanism paradigm,
Majerus's book left no doubt that the classic story was wrong in almost every
detail; Kettlewell was wrong about how peppered moths choose their resting
sites; the high densities of moths he used may have skewed the results; the
method of release was faulty, and on and on" (Hooper, p. 283).
"Jerry
Coyne, however, was 'horrified'. The sheer magnitude of the problems itemized
in the [Majerus] book filled him with dismay and something like shame. After
all, he too had been teaching the 'standard Biston story' for years. When he
dug out Kettlewell's original papers he found that things were even worse than
he thought" (Hooper, p. 283, 284). "After [Coyne] went back to
Kettlewell's original papers and 'unearthed additional problems,' Coyne
concluded that this 'prize horse in our stable of examples' of evolution 'is in
bad shape, and while not yet ready for the glue factory, needs serious
attention" (Wells, p. 153).
"Richard
Harrison, an evolutionary biologist at Cornell, is emphatic: 'We should no
longer use the [peppered moth] example in textbooks'" (Hooper, p. 304).
XII.
"If we do not accept the hypothesis of spontaneous generation [of life
from non-living matter], then at this one point of the history of development
[evolution]we must have recourse to the miracle of a supernatural
creation"--Ernst Haeckel.
"Thus,
from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we
are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals,
directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several
powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into
one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed
law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and
most wonderful have been, and are being evolved" (Charles Darwin, The
Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection Or The Preservation of Favored
Races In the Struggle for Life. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1898, Volume
II, p. 305, 306 with Additions and Corrections from Sixth and Last English
Edition).
"The
microbes seen, therefore, originated from preexisting microbes and not by
abiogenesis or spontaneous generation. By the use of glass flasks in which
there was a sterile nutrient--it had been thoroughly boiled--Pasteur showed
that, in the presence of air from which airborne bacteria had been excluded by
filtration, no organic growth occurred in the vessels, and the solutions
remained sterile. . . . It was almost incidental to his main purpose, but
Pasteur had dealt a severe blow to the idea of spontaneous generation"
(Ian T. Taylor, In The Minds of Men, p. 181).
"Amino
acid molecules occur in right-handed and left-handed forms. These forms are
mirror images of each other, and have identical chemical properties. In
prebiotic experiments the two forms occur in equal portions. Amino acids
polymerize without preference for either handed form--the two forms join
together with equal facility. Yet , protein from known life uses only
left-handed amino acids. . . . Chance cannot account for the origin of these
features" (Walter James ReMine, The Biotic Message: Evolution Versus
Message Theory, p. 83).
"The
world is too complicated in all its parts and interconnections to be due to
chance alone. I am convinced that the existence of life with all its order in
each of its organisms is simply too well put together. Each part of a living
thing depends on all its other parts to function. How does each part know? How
is each part specified at conception? The more one learns of bio-chemistry the
more unbelievable it becomes unless there is some type of organizing
principle" (Allan Sandage, A Scientist Reflects on Religious Belief, p.
20; cited in Norman Geisler, Systematic Theology, Volume two, p. 663, 664).
XIII.
"To suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting
the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and
for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been
formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest
degree" (Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species By Means of Natural
Selection or The Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life, Volume
I, p. 223, 224).
"For
instance, it cannot be doubted that all the Cambrian and Silurian trilobites
are descended from some one crustacean, which must have lived long before the
Cambrian age. . . . To the question why we do not find rich fossiliferous
deposits belonging to these assumed earliest periods prior to the Cambrian
system, I can give no satisfactory answer. . . . Never-the-less, the
difficultly of assigning any good reason for the absence of vast piles of
strata rich in fossils beneath the Cambrian system is very great. . . . The
case at present must remain inexplicable; and may be truly urged as a valid
argument against the views here entertained" (Charles Darwin, Volume II,
p. 82-85). As of June 15, 2013 no invertebrates (animals without backbones)
have been discovered in the Pre-Cambrian
period and trilobites appear in an 'explosion' in the Cambrian period. See W.R.
Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited, Volume I, p. 51f.
"The
eye of the trilobite, as of all invertebrates, had incredible information
content: 'The lens systems were very different from what we now have. Riccardo
Levi-Setti (a Field Museum research associate in geology and professor of
physics at the University of Chicago) has recently done some spectacular work
on the optics of these lens systems. . . . Each lens is a doublet (that is,
made up of two lenses). . . . The shape of the boundary between the two lenses
is unlike any now in use--either by humans or animals. But the shape is nearly
identical to designs published independently by Descartes and Huygens in the
seventeenth century" (W.R. Bird, The Origin of Species Revisited, Volume
I, p. 74).
"Even
more sophisticated was the trilobite with its three longitudinal lobes across
its head (a raised middle lobe and a flatter pleural lobe to either side) and a
body divided into three parts--head, chest, and tail, the former two consisting
of as many as thirty segments. It had a pair of legs for every pleural groove
and another three pairs for the head. Most dramatic of all were the compound
eyes found on even some of the very early trilobites--eyes that afforded these
not so primitive animals, a 360-degree field of vision" (Stephen C. Meyer,
Darwin's Doubt, p. 10).
"[Garrett]
Hardin must have realized that his answer was inadequate, for he returned to
the problem later in his book, saying: '. . . That damned eye--the human eye .
. . which Darwin freely conceded to constitute a severe strain on this theory
of evolution. Is so simple a principle as natural selection equal to explaining
so complex a structure as the image-producing eye?'" (Macbeth, p.101).
"But
ask now the beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the fowls of the air and
they shall tell thee; Or speak to the earth, and it shall teach thee; and the
fishes of the sea and declare unto thee. Who knoweth not in all these that the
hand of the Lord hath wrought this? In whose hand is the soul of every living
thing, and the breath of all mankind" (Job 12:7f).
"Did
you know that my entire skull [field sparrow] is lighter than both my eyeballs?
That doesn't mean that you have to make nasty remarks about my birdbrain. My
eyes are far better than yours are. We birds have seven to eight times more
visual cells per unit of surface area than you. That way we have an image in
our brains that is much sharper than yours. For example, if you wanted to see an
object as clearly as a buzzard does, you would have to use a (8x30) telescope.
I admit my eyes are not quite so sharp, but I'm still sure that they are much
better than yours. A biologist wrote that my eye is a miracle of construction,
function, and efficiency. It is one of the most perfect optical organs in the
vertebrate world. It has to be, because even when we are flying at our fastest
we can't afford to miss any important detail" (Werner Gitt, If Animals
Could Talk, p. 15).
"You
scientists are still scratching your heads trying to figure out how we [Golden
Plover] get our course [from Alaska to Hawaii] and can correct it, even after
an in-flight storm takes its toll. We fly through fog and rain, whether
sunshine, starlight, or overcast skies, and still get there. Even if they do
ever dream up a way that could explain how we do it, they won't know how we
came to have such astonishing capabilities. I'd like to let you in on it. God,
the Lord, gave us a built-in automatic pilot. Your jet aircraft have similar
devices. They're hooked up to computers that continuously monitor current
position and compare it with the programmed course. They then make the
necessary adjustments to lock on target. Our Creator pre-programmed us with the
co-ordinates of the Hawaiian Islands so that we have absolutely no trouble
getting there! This complete system is not only reliable, but has also been
miniaturized for portability" (Werner Gitt, p. 109).
"What's
this masterful diving equipment for? Why do I [Sperm whale] dive to the bottom,
where there's no sunshine--into the eternal night and the darkest depths? Some
people say that I am the all-time champion when it comes to eating--that I'll
eat anything. But to be honest, squid are my favorite dish, and they are only
to be found at great depths. I eat small squid by the thousands. Your whalers
once counted 28,000 of them in the stomach of one of our dead colleagues. I
even eat the larger squid by the dozen. To tell the truth, the ocean floor is
the only place you can find the greatest delicacy of all: giant octopus. There
are lots of tall tales about these animals, which can be as big as 8 meters,
with tentacles as long as 15 meters. I have eaten whoppers like that whole. But
usually there is a real 'battle of the giants' before he lands up in my
stomach. With my fine locating system, I can find my prey without fail. I send
out little clicks, and listen for the echoes. Despite the deepest darkness, my
sonar system gives me precise information about the number and size of my prey"
(Werner Gitt, p. 32, 33).
XIV.
"Among the favorite pieces of 'evidence for evolution,' that is found in
virtually every biology textbook, are what are claimed to be vestigial organs
present in both
plant, animal, and man. These are organs that are believed to have once been
useful during a previous stage of evolutionary development but in continuing
evolution are in the process of being selected out by modification" (Ian
T. Taylor, In The Minds Of Men, p. 264).
"Robert
Wiedersheim, a German anatomist, compiled a list of more than one hundred
eighty rudimentary structures in man, and the human body came to be thought of
as a walking museum of antiquity. But as the knowledge of physiology increased,
it was found that most of these organs have a useful function, and many of them
are vital" (Bolton Davidheiser, Evolution and Christian Faith, p. 235).
"In
Germany the anatomist Robert Wiedersheim, a Darwinian enthusiast, fulfilling
all the expectations of his country's reputation for thoroughness, produced a
masterwork, in 1895, entitled The Structure of Man. In this work he listed
eighty-six human organs that he claimed were mere vestiges, no longer having
any useful function (Wiedersheim 1895, p. 200 in Taylor, In the Minds of Men,
p. 264).
"Wiedersheim's
vestigial list included the pineal gland; the pituitary body; the lachrymal
glands, which produce tears; the tonsils; the thymus; the thyroid; certain
valves of the veins; bones in the third, fourth, and fifth toes; parts of the
embryo; and certain counterparts of the reproductive structures of the opposite
sex such as the clitoris. Of course, the list also included all those features
mentioned by Darwin, such as the appendix and the coccyx" (Taylor, p.
265).
"Darwin's
list of human organs, later expanded to more than one hundred by Wiedersheim,
has now shrunk to two or three very questionable claims, due to advances made
in medical knowledge, and leaves only one certainty, the male nipples, and, notably,
most textbooks no longer include this item. Claude Villee (Biology, 1977, p.
773.) makes an incredible exception! The medical advances made since Darwin's
day have shown that virtually all of these vestigial organs do, in fact, have
functions, many of which are very necessary at an early stage of our physical
development. . . . Steven R. Scadding [University of Guelph], writing in 1981,
was forthright enough to admit that vestigial organs provide no evidence for
evolution" (Taylor, p. 267).
Summary:
a) All
major sources were garnered from non-evangelical Christians. Richard Milton
actually says, "Let me make it unambiguously clear that I am not a
creationist, nor do I have any religious beliefs of any kind" (Milton, p.
269).
b)
Jonathan Wells, Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth? covers the following items
supposedly proving Darwinian evolution: The Miller-Urey Experiment, Homology in
Vertebrate Limbs, Haeckel's Embryos, Archaeopteryx--The Missing Link, Peppered
Moths, Darwin's Finches, Four-Winged Fruit Flies, Fossil Horses, and Ape to
Human.
c)
Norman Macbeth, Darwin Retried: An Appeal to Reason covers the following items:
Comparative Anatomy and Embryology, Breeders, Natural Selection, The Struggle
for Existence, Survival of the Fittest, Adaptation, Sexual Selection, Paley and
Probability, Extinction, Case of the Hopeful Monster, Immanuel Velikovsky and
Catastrophes, Designed antics of insects (esp. wasplike Eumenes amedei). What
greatly concerns Macbeth is the following: Sir Julian Huxley, "The first
point to make about Darwin's theory is that it is no longer a theory, but a
fact." Professor Ernst Mayr: "The basic [Darwinian] theory is in many
instances hardly more than a postulate [assumed to be true]."
d)
Richard Milton, Shattering The Myths of Darwinism covers the following items:
Age of the Earth, Present key to the past, Flood water and sediment, the
geological column, Coal, Velikovsky and Catastrophes, fossils, Survival of the
Fittest, Bears became whales, Intermediate types missing, Beak of the Finch,
DNA, Homology, Race and eugenics ("No rational man, cognizant of the
facts, believes that the Negro is the equal, still less the superior of the
white man"--Thomas Huxley.) ("In the Descent
of Man, Darwin indicated his belief that the Negro races were more closely
related to the apes than white people."), Vestigial organs, Neanderthals,
Piltdown man, Hopeful Monsters, Marx and Darwin, Coelacanth fish. What greatly
concerns Milton: "David Raup, professor of paleobiology at the University
of Chicago--'Countless species of plants and animals have existed in the
history of life on Earth. Estimates of the total progeny of evolution range
from 5 to 50 billion species. Yet only an estimated 5 to 50 million species are
alive today--a rather poor survival record. With, at the most, only one in
every thousand species surviving, what happened to the others?"
e) Dr.
Michael Denton insists that modern microbiology beginning in the 1950s makes
all "other anti-Darwinian arguments superfluous" (p. 332). He argues
that "it is not just the complexity of living systems which is so
profoundly challenging, there is also the incredible ingenuity that is so often
manifest in their design...every living cell is a veritable automated factory
depending on the functioning of up to one hundred thousand unique proteins each
of which can be considered to be a basic working component" (p. 332, 335).
He also says, "There is a growing likelihood that the genome may contain
even more than one thousand million bits of information" (p. 351). And
concludes, "Ultimately the Darwinian theory of evolution is no more or
less than the great cosmogenic myth of the twentieth century" (p. 358).
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The Schwarz Report/ September 2013