Thinking
About the Theory of Design

A Report on the Symposium "Can
There be a Scientific Theory of Intelligent Design?" held at the 48th Annual Meeting
of the American Scientific Affiliation, Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA, August 9,
1993
Paul Nelson
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Introduction: Why Return
to a Disreputable Business?
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Present theological discussions . . .
ignore natural theology, and for contemporary linguistic philosophers the Argument from
Design possesses no validity whatsoever and is logically and morally indefensible,
although it may serve to heighten religious emotions.
-- Meyrick H. Carre
"Physicotheology," The Encyclopedia of Philosophy
One wonders what religious emotions the
argument from design is supposed to heighten. Presumably they do not themselves make any
strong claim to reasonableness. "All poets," said W.H. Auden, "adore
explosions, thunderstorms, tornadoes, conflagrations, ruins," and "scenes of
spectacular carnage."1 And that is why, perhaps,
poets are not generally at the reins of power. "The poetic imagination," Auden
noted ruefully, "is not at all a desirable quality in a statesman." Analogously,
we might observe, any emotion that can be heightened by a completely invalid and
indefensible argument, is hardly one to be encouraged in the scientific enterprise
-- although, to Carre's way of thinking, religion may have some use for the sentiment.
Is the theory of design (as I shall call it)
really as bad as all that?2 Ask most scientists and
philosophers, and the answer will be yes. Design as a scientific explanation is widely
regarded as a dusty museum piece, a device that ceased to function in the nineteenth
century. According to this view, when design collapsed around 1859 and the wreckage went
into a display case, it was discovered that the theory had been supported all along only
by various logical and theological mistakes. Therefore (it is claimed), if design has
anything to teach us today, the lesson is strictly cautionary. Nowadays all reputable
scientists and philosophers, whatever they may believe away from the lab or seminar room,
are methodological naturalists.
That's the usual story. Looked at closely,
however, the usual story has some remarkable, or fabulous -- meaning genuinely legendary
-- passages. It is a legend, for example, that Charles Darwin solved the problem of the
origin of biological complexity. It is a legend that we have a good or even fair grasp on
the origin of life, or that proper explanations refer only to so-called natural causes. To
be sure, these and other legends of philosophical naturalism have a certain stature. One
does not speak too harshly of them in polite company.
But neither should one accept them
uncritically. Indeed, if we view the legends of philosophical naturalism with justifiable
skepticism, the case against design looks far less formidable. But we can go further.
While much work remains to be done to develop an empirically fruitful theory of design, it
appears that none of the standing objections to design is unanswerable. As those
objections are removed one by one, within the next decade it is quite likely that (in the
words of design theorist Bill Dembski) "a theory of design can be formulated which
will have significant advantages over its Darwin-inspired competitors."
Now before the reader dismisses me for my
naive optimism, let me acknowledge that a profound antipathy to design extends throughout
the scientific and philosophical communities. When all the arguments for the theory have
been weighed, many persons will still conclude that design is a bad idea assembled from
noxious materials, which belongs where it has long resided -- safely behind glass in the
Hall of Great Scientific Failures.
Plainly, I do not think design is a bad idea;
when weighed, arguments for design are, I believe, powerfully compelling. To be weighed,
however, arguments for design must be heard. Thus, in August, the American
Scientific Affiliation (ASA), an organization of Christians in the sciences, convened a
symposium on the theory of design. Those unfamiliar with the ASA might suppose that such a
symposium would be a congress of the already-converted, but that is not the case. Many of
the strongest critics of design as a scientific explanation are leaders in the ASA,
prominent in both its publications and lectures. These persons argue that they, perhaps
better than most, are qualified to find the theory of design wanting. They are the
intellectual offspring of believing scientists of past generations, who (it is said) found
that design, when applied as a scientific explanation, fell to pieces in one's hands. Thus
the ASA was in many respects a less sympathetic audience for considering design than many
secular audiences might have been.
No poll was taken after the symposium, but in
discussions before and after the talks, the speakers (including myself) discovered great
curiosity about the merits of design as an explanation and cautious encouragement for
attempts to reframe the theory on new foundations. This report brings some of the points
argued to a larger audience. Readers are strongly encouraged to contact the speakers (c/o Origins
Research) with any criticisms or insights. Three of the speakers (Dembski, Meyer and
Nelson) are engaged in a research project on the theory of design, funded by the Pascal
Centre in Ontario, Canada, which will culminate in a book-length monograph on the subject.
In what follows I review the major points of
each talk.
The first speaker, William Dembski, is a
University of Chicago-trained mathematician (Ph.D. 1988), now completing a second Ph.D. in
philosophy. Dembski approaches the theory of design first as a probabilist interested in
explicating the structure of the "ordinary" design inferences that abound in our
everyday life.
These inferences conform under analysis to
what Dembski calls "a standard operating procedure," illustrated by the flow
chart in Figure 1. Consider an example3: John Smith died because his pacemaker malfunctioned. Smith's death
due to pacemaker malfunction is the event, E (the circle at the top of the flow
chart), to be explained. Now suppose that on examining the pacemaker and Smith's medical
history, we discover that the pacemaker battery, although guaranteed to be fully
functional for five years, was certain to run out after seven. Smith was negligent and
forgot to replace the battery. Sure enough, it ran out, Smith's heart fibrillated, and he
died.
In this example we terminate (in explaining
E) at the first decision node, HP. Given the physical principles governing pacemaker
batteries and Smith's negligence, his death from pacemaker malfunction was a high
probability, or HP event, certain or virtually certain to occur. "And if
we can explain by necessity," said Dembski, "chance and design are automatically
precluded."
Suppose Smith wasn't negligent, however.
Suppose, in fact, that he replaced the battery just a year ago. Here we pass to the second
decision node, IP, or to the class of intermediate probability events. These
events, said Dembski, "are sufficiently probable as not to be a source of
amazement." Smith, it turns out, fell victim to a chance failure. Pacemaker
manufacturers routinely test very large samples of batteries to ensure that the
probability of failure for any given battery is extremely low. Nevertheless, while
unlikely, it is still possible that before the expected five-year period, some batteries
will by chance fail. Smith came up unlucky in this dreadful lottery. The pacemaker battery
ran out after only one year, his heart fibrillated, and he died. Smith's death is an IP
event. Such chance events occur -- they fill the newspaper -- but we don't attribute them
to design.
Solving a Mystery
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Consider another scenario, however. At
Smith's autopsy we can find nothing amiss with his pacemaker -- except for some peculiar
damage that we know can be caused only by exposure to intense microwave radiation.
Our suspicions aroused, we begin an inquest and soon discover the following
1. Jane Doe, Smith's co-worker, rented
microwave-transmitting equipment 10 days before Smith's death.
2. Smith signed a life insurance policy one week before his death, naming Jane Doe the
sole beneficiary.
3. There are scratches on Smith's kitchen floor that correspond exactly to the dimensions
of the microwave equipment.
4. A pamphlet on pacemaker risks, including microwave exposure, is found in Jane Doe's
car.
5. The microwave warning in the pamphlet is underlined.
6. "Get John Smith next week" is written in the margin, next to the underlined
warning, in Jane Doe's handwriting.
7. Witnesses saw Jane Doe leave Smith's house shortly before he was discovered dead.
The police arrest Jane Doe immediately. She
protests her innocence, but the district attorney jails her anyway and charges her with
the pre-meditated murder of Smith. In the course of a trial the jury convicts her of the
crime, and she is sentenced to life imprisonment.
Why do Jane Doe's claims of innocence ring
hollow? How can we be reasonably certain that she intended -- designed, if you will
-- to kill Smith?
We have moved to the last decision node,
SP/sp. Confronting us is an event of small probability (SP): the likelihood that
Smith's pacemaker failure was caused by anything but intense microwave radiation is
vanishingly remote. This was determined at the autopsy before the inquest began:
indeed, this finding caused us to suspect foul play, and thus to begin the inquest.
Note, however, that this small probability event alone isn't sufficient grounds for us to
infer design (i.e., purposeful action) or to implicate Jane Doe. After all, Smith might
have owned a poorly insulated microwave oven or tinkered unwisely with microwave equipment
in his workshop.
The seven lines of evidence, however, do
implicate Jane Doe. These, taken jointly, are what Dembski calls a specification.
Specification (sp) is "an extra-probabilistic notion" (in Dembski's words) that,
when conjoined with small probability, provides robust grounds for inferring design. At
the third decision node, when both SP (small probability) and sp (specification) are
present, we may reasonably infer design as the cause of an event E.
It's important, Dembski said, to see how
specification and small probability necessarily work together to lead us to infer design.
"Our naive intuition," he noted, "is that SP events simply don't happen and
can be safely ignored." But, he continued, that can't be right: small probability
events happen all the time. Flip a coin 1000 times, and you will have participated in an
SP event with a probability of 1 in 10300.
But if a stranger approaches you on the
street the next day and gives you a piece of paper with the exact sequence of coin
flips (recorded as 1s and 0s) that you produced in the privacy of your study, you're
entitled to suspect some funny business. That stranger gave you a specification, and its match
with the SP event you independently produced calls for an explanation. As Dembski put it,
If a probabilistic setup, like tossing a coin
1000 times, entails that some SP event will occur, then necessarily some extremely
improbable event will occur. If, however, independently of the event we are able to
specify it, then we have cause for surprise and alarm. It's the specified SP events
that cannot be attributed to chance.
In the Smith/Doe case the match is
between the SP event itself (microwave damage to Smith's pacemaker, causing his death) and
the seven lines of evidence that jointly constitute a specification of the event. Note
that we could have started our investigation with one or another aspect of the specification,
e.g., the witnesses placing Jane Doe at the house, and only later -- as evidence
accumulated -- examined the pacemaker for microwave damage. The temporal relation in our
knowledge of the small probability event and the specification is not important. It's the match
between them that convinces us of design and eventually lands Jane Doe in prison for first
degree murder.
This hypothetical example may seem somewhat
fanciful. But, as Dembski pointed out, inferences with exactly this logical structure
(i.e., following this "standard operating procedure") are routinely employed not
only by detectives but also by:
- Copyright and patent offices to identify theft
of intellectual property
- Insurance companies to prevent themselves from
being defrauded
- Skeptics to debunk the claims of
parapsychology experiments
- Scientists to identify cases of data
falsification
- The NASA SETI program to identify the presence
of extraterrestrial intelligence
In other words, we derive and place great
weight on design inferences all the time.
Solving Scientific
Mysteries?
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Still, Dembski asked, "Is what's good
enough for a court of law good enough for science?" Some worries come crowding in:
Even if one grants that the flow chart
accurately describes the pre-theoretic practice of nonscientists in making design
inferences, it's not clear that this descriptive account should be in any way normative
for the practice of science . . . doesn't design . . . always leave us open to a
God-of-the-gaps objection? And since design does not figure into contemporary scientific
practice, why not rather dispense with it, and concentrate on the bread-and-butter
explanations of science, to wit, chance and necessity?
Flow charts are all very well, but can we be
certain that design inferences are valid? "It turns out," said Dembski,
"that a valid deductive argument does indeed undergird the standard operating
procedure that people use to infer design." The argument may be expressed as follows:
The Argument to Design
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Premise 1: E is specified.
Premise 2: E has occurred.
Premise 3: E has occurred either by chance, necessity, or design.
Premise 4: E did not occur by necessity.
Premise 5: If E occurred by chance, then E has probability less than or equal to p.
Premise 6: Specified events of probability less than or equal to p do not occur by chance.
Conclusion: E occurred by design.
Suppose E, said Dembski, "is the event
of opening a safe." We've satisfied Premise 1: E is clearly specified, because
"the safe is so constituted that only one of the many possible combinations opens
it." Premise 2 says simply that E has occurred. Premise 3, a trichotomy rule, says
that E is due either to chance, necessity, or design. Since most of contemporary science
restricts itself to chance and necessity, Premise 3 at worst introduces a superfluous
element, namely design.
Premise 4 tells us the safe did not open by
necessity, which is not controversial. "No known regularities of nature," said
Dembski, "account for the opening of safes with secure combination locks."
Premise 5 is likewise not controversial. "On any reasonable lock, the probability of
hitting the right combination 'by chance' will be exceedingly small."
Premise 6 is what Dembski calls The Law of
Small Probability. This law, he argued, "is a basic regulative principle of
statistics," by which "we are entitled to eliminate chance as an
explanation."
Without this law, he stressed, we are
powerless to make judgments in the face of uncertainty. In particular, statistical
inference --which is indispensable to science -- would be impossible without the Law of
Small Probability.
In sum, when applied to the opening of a
safe, these premises are unquestionably true. Since they entail the conclusion, the
argument is valid, and therefore the conclusion itself must be true. The safe was opened
by design. (Even if we are not absolutely certain of the premises, Dembski noted, we can
still have confidence in the argument. "Entailment automatically gives us partial
entailment as well." Thus, if we hold only that the premises are very likely, the
conclusion will itself be very likely.)
Which Premise Do
Evolutionists Reject?
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The argument to design hides no logical
surprises. Yet in the literature of evolutionary biology, and the many volumes of the
creation/evolution controversy, authors appeal regularly to probability considerations,
exhibiting in addition an intuitive grasp of the notion of specification -- but come to
very different conclusions in the end. Richard Dawkins, for instance, is quite eloquent on
the extraordinary specificity of organisms, and the vanishingly small likelihood that such
specificity could arise by chance. Nevertheless, he denies that organisms are designed.
For Dawkins, organisms are the products "of purposeless natural forces not guided by
any intelligence."
Which premise of the Argument to Design,
Dembski asked, does Dawkins reject? Suppose that the event E to be explained is the
occurrence of life here on earth (call this LIFE). Running through the premises
individually, it is clear that neither 1 nor 2 is problematical for Dawkins (who has
written in The Blind Watchmaker [BW] that organisms "have some quality,
specifiable in advance, that is highly unlikely to have been acquired by random chance
alone"). Nor is Premise 6 a problem. In BW Dawkins sets an upper bound to the
"amount of luck" one is allowed to postulate for LIFE, "clearly
restating," Dembski pointed out, "the Law of Small Probability." Lastly,
although Dawkins would regard design as superfluous in the post-Darwinian scientific
world, he plainly sees it as an empirical possibility. The trichotomy of Premise 3
is safe as well.
Whether Dawkins thinks LIFE is necessary
(Premise 4) is, Dembski observed, less clear, because Dawkins "never assigns precise
probabilities to events connected with the origin of life." Still, it seems
reasonable to think that Dawkins would accept Premise 4, given that his goal in BW
is to show that the naturalistic occurrence of LIFE is probable enough, not that the
probability of its occurrence approaches unity.
Premise 5 is the real focus of disagreement.
"Dawkins explicitly rejects Premise 5," said Dembski, by his "appeal to
cumulative selection." Dawkins sees selection over many generations as rendering
probable what we would otherwise naively regard as improbable. It was Darwin's genius, on
this view, to provide the mechanism of selection as a naturalistic means for generating
the complexity of living things.
As an empirical matter, however (Dembski
continued), the status of Premise 5 "is still wide open." It is far from clear
that selective mechanisms will suffice to account for LIFE. How does one go about
determining the probability of LIFE? Are the extant evolutionary scenarios really
plausible? Some evolutionists, perhaps recognizing that probabilistic difficulties have
carried off the plausibility of their scenarios, avail themselves of a cosmological
buffet, where they fill their plates with hypothetical planets and universes in which LIFE
may have arisen -- thus making LIFE on this planet less surprising. As Dembksi put
it,
Dawkins, to explain LIFE apart from a
designer, not only gives himself all the time Darwin ever wanted, but also helps himself
to all the conceivable planets there might be in the observable universe (note that these
are planets he must posit, since no planets outside our solar system have been observed,
nor is there currently any compelling theory of planetary formation which guarantees that
the observable universe is populated with planets). Thus Barrow and Tipler, in order to
justify their various anthropic principles, not only give themselves all the time and
planets that Dawkins ever wanted, but also help themselves to a generous serving of
universes (universes which are per definitionem causally inaccessible to us).
The truth of design, Dembski concluded, is an
empirical question to be settled by looking to nature. Here the philosopher must pass the
problem to the scientist, for the "laws and regularities" involved in Premise 4,
and the "concrete probabilities" of Premise 5, are matters of fact to be
determined by observation and experiment. But scientists should know that the theory of
design leaves the hands of the philosopher marked, as Bertrand Russell said,
... by no formal logical defect; its premises
are empirical, and its conclusion professes to be reached in accordance with the usual
canons of empirical inference. The question whether it is to be accepted turns, therefore,
not on general metaphysical questions, but on comparatively detailed considerations.4
Those "considerations" are
empirical. From Dembski's perspective, the empirical details speak unmistakably of design;
but we should turn to the next speaker, Michael Behe, who addressed that topic.
Michael Behe (Ph.D., Biochemistry, University
of Pennsylvania, 1978) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry at Lehigh
University. Behe's research focuses on the structure of nucleic acids -- specifically,
working under a grant from the National Institutes of Health, he examines the structural
properties of certain tracts in eukaryotic DNA to determine their ability to interact with
histone proteins to form nucleosomes, the basic structures of chromatin (the material
found in chromosomes).
While Dembski's talk concerned the logical
structure of the design inference, Behe addressed the biological evidence that
(when fitted into the design inference) motivates many to reject neo-Darwinism in favor of
design. "It will be the burden of my talk," he said, "to show that
Darwinism has been unable to account for phenomena uncovered by the efforts of modern
biochemistry during the second half of this century."
Behe's principal target was the theory of
natural selection:
Natural selection, at some level, is the
putative engine which pulls the neo-Darwinian train, and if natural selection stalls, then
the whole Darwinian scheme grinds to a halt.
The data of biochemistry place grave
obstacles in the path of neo-Darwinian explanation by natural selection, Behe stressed,
because those data appear to indicate that, "at its most fundamental level,"
life is "irreducibly complex." In the face of such complexity, selection can
effect nothing.
Organisms as Black Boxes
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As a first step on the path to the notion of
irreducible complexity, Behe began with Darwin's discussion of the evolution of the eye.
"How a nerve comes to be sensitive to light," said Darwin in the Origin,
"hardly concerns us more than how life itself first originated."5 Darwin could lay such questions of mechanism aside, given the
rudimentary biochemical science of his day, and concentrate his attention instead on
finding a series of graded intermediates between the simplest and most complex eyes,
arguing that selection sufficed to bridge the differences. The less that is known about
how eyes (or other complex structures) actually work, Behe noted, the easier this strategy
of evolutionary explanation. One simply strings together a series of black boxes.
"Unconstrained by knowledge of the
mechanism," he said, we find it easy "to imagine simple steps leading from
nonfunction to function." Calvin and Hobbes can easily imagine that the cardboard box
into which they have climbed might take them into the air. Adults, on the other hand, know
that a cardboard box is no more likely to fly than a pile of stones. Human powered flight
occurs via complex mechanisms, and the "black box" of an airplane is black only
to those (most of us) who know nothing about aeronautics and avionics. Analogously, Behe
continued,
... when the exploratory vessel H.M.S. Cyclops
dredged up some curious-looking mud from the sea bottom, no less a personage than
Thomas Henry Huxley became convinced that it was Urschleim
... the progenitor of life itself, and Huxley named the mud Bathybius Haeckelii,
after the eminent proponent of abiogenesis (German evolutionist Ernst Haeckel).
Haeckel and Huxley, seeing single-celled
living things as "simple," could regard Bathybius (an artifact caused by the
alcohol used to preserve the dredged mud) as their evolutionary precursor. As the real
complexity of even the simplest organisms became apparent, however, "belief in
spontaneous generation faded away."
The mistaken perception that single-celled
organisms were "simple" was abetted by their status as black boxes. But just as
modern biochemistry has "opened the black boxes of many biological systems,"
said Behe, and elucidated at the molecular level such functions as vision, so our
understanding of what it means to explain biologically should likewise shift, to take
account of what we now know.
Proteins
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"Proteins," said Behe, "are
the machinery of living tissue that build the structures and carry out the chemical
reactions necessary for life." Much like the carpenter's workshop that contains many
different types of tools for various tasks, so "a typical cell contains thousands and
thousands of different types of proteins," to carry out the diversity of functions
that sustain life. Assembled from amino acids in chains "anywhere from 50 to 1,000
amino acids" long, proteins fold up into "very precise" three-dimensional
structures -- and those structures determine their precise functions.
Protein structure and function are therefore
as fundamentally linked as the structure and function of the tools in the carpenter's
shop. Like the tools, said Behe, "if the shapes of the proteins are significantly
warped, then they fail to do their jobs."
But how much "warping" can a
protein tolerate? asked Behe. The three-dimensional structure of a protein is determined
by its primary sequence. A change in that primary sequence, from a positively to a
negatively charged amino acid, for instance, may affect the protein's ability to fold
properly, and hence its function. In a small protein of, say, 100 amino acid residues,
there are 20 possible amino acids for each site. Thus, the probability of finding the
right amino acid for the first site is 1 in 20. The probability of finding the correct two
amino acids, in the first and second positions, is 1 in 20100, and so on. For the
entire protein, the probability would be 1 in 20 to the one hundredth power (or 10130).
Yet it has long been known, Behe continued,
that similar proteins from different species show differences in their primary amino acid
sequences, while still folding to "closely similar structures." It is possible,
therefore, "for two different but similar amino acid sequences to be structurally and
functionally equivalent." Some amino acid changes appear to be tolerated. Is there a
limit, however, to what changes are possible? And is there a way of answering that
question directly (rather than only comparatively)?
At MIT, in the laboratory of Robert Sauer and
his colleagues, just such a direct answer was sought for several viral proteins. Taking
the genes for the viral proteins, Sauer's group systematically deleted small pieces
(corresponding to the instructions for three amino acids at a time), and inserted altered
pieces back into the genes at the sites of the deletions. The altered genes, placed in
bacteria, produced altered proteins. Since the bacteria quickly destroy proteins which
fail to fold properly, Sauer's group was able to isolate the altered proteins that were
not destroyed. By sequencing those altered proteins, the biologists could observe which
amino acids, in which positions, would produce a folded, functional protein.
What Sauer's group found, said Behe, was that
some sites tolerated a great diversity of possible amino acids (up to 15 out of 20
possibilities). Other sites tolerated much less diversity: only three or four amino acids
would still yield a functional protein. Other sites, however, had "an absolute
requirement for a particular amino acid" --no substitutions would work:
This means that if, say, a P does not appear
at position 78 of a given protein, the protein will not fold regardless of the proximity
of the rest of the sequence to the natural protein.
Gathering these experimental results over the
whole length of the protein, one can readily calculate the likelihood of finding a folded
protein by a random mutational search: about 1 in 10 to the 65th power. The number, Behe
noted, is "virtually identical to results obtained earlier by theoretical
calculations," a confirmation that "greatly increases our confidence that a
correct result has been obtained."
Molecular Machines
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As "complex and improbable as folded
proteins are," said Behe, "in many biological structures [they] are simply
components of larger molecular machines." In these larger structures, each protein
component functions only "when all of the components have been assembled."
Consider, Behe observed, the molecular
machine of a cilium. Cilia are microscopic hair-like organelles found on the
surfaces of many cells, that, by beating in synchrony, move fluid over the cell's surface,
or propel single cells through a fluid. The epithelial cells lining the human respiratory
tract, for instance, each have 200 cilia moving synchronously to sweep mucus (bearing
foreign particles) towards the throat, where it can be eliminated.
The major protein components of a cilium can
be seen in the top-down cross section of Figure
2.The ciliary core, or axoneme, is a plasma membrane-coated bundle of fibers, which
includes a ring of 9 double microtubules, surrounding 2 central single microtubules (the
"9 + 2" array). Each outer doublet is composed of 13 filaments (A subfibers),
fused to an assembly of 10 filaments (B subfibers). The individual filaments are
themselves composed of two proteins called alpha- and beta-tubulin.
The 11 microtubules forming an axoneme in the
"9 + 2" array are held together by three types of connectors (see Figure 2):
1. The A subfibers are joined to the central
microtubules by radial spokes, which terminate in a knoblike feature called a spoke
head.
2. Adjacent outer doublets are joined by linkers along the circumference, that consist in
part of a highly elastic protein called nexin.
3. The central microtubules are joined by a connecting bridge. Each type of connector is
repeated along the length of the axoneme with its own characteristic periodicity.
Finally, every A subfiber has two arms -- an
inner arm and an outer arm -- both containing the protein dynein.
So, asked Behe, "how does a cilium
work?" Experiments have shown that ciliary motion is caused by the chemically-powered
"walking" of the dynein arms along the adjacent B subfibers. (See the side view
cross section of an axoneme segment in Figure
3.) Using ATP -- the common carrier of cellular chemical energy -- as their power
source, the dynein arms on one microtubule "walk" up the neighboring B subfiber
of a second microtubule, so that the two microtubules slide past each other.
This sliding motion is transformed into a bending
motion by the nexin protein cross-links. The nexin cross-links keep the neighboring
microtubules from sliding past each other by more than a short distance, thereby
converting the dynein-induced sliding motion into a bending motion of the entire axoneme.
What happens to the bending function of the
cilium, however, if its components are removed experimentally one by one? Remove the
dynein arms, said Behe, and the cilium becomes rigid and inflexible. Its flexibility can
be restored only when the dynein is replaced. Remove the nexin cross-links (by exposing
them to the proteolytic enzyme trypsin), and the microtubule doublets slide past each
other without stopping. The axoneme simply falls apart. Remove the alpha-and
beta-tubulins, and there will be no filaments at all to bend. Removing one or another of
the ciliary proteins, concluded Behe, "is like trying to design a pulley without a
rope, or a lever without a fulcrum." Each protein has its proper function only when
all are present.6
The cilium, continued Behe, is an example of
"irreducible complexity."While plainly a complex structure, like an eye or a
feather, the cilium possesses a complexity of a remarkable type:
It is also irreducible complexity. By this I
mean that the components of the cilia are not themselves composed. They are single
molecules. There are no more black boxes to invoke: the complexity is final.
The implications of irreducible complexity
for the theory of natural selection are devastating. "Since the complexity of the
cilium is irreducible," said Behe, "it cannot have functional precursors."
The evidence at hand seems strongly to suggest that one either has a cilium, with
all its necessary protein components in place -- or one has nothing (or nothing
functional, certainly). There seems to be no actual or even imaginable gradient of simpler
molecular structures leading up to a cilium. Yet such a gradient is exactly what natural
selection requires. Because the cilium does not have functional precursors, said Behe,
"it cannot be produced by natural selection, which requires a continuum of function
to work. Natural selection is powerless where there is no function to select." And if
the cilium cannot be produced by natural selection, he added, "then the cilium was
designed."
The Burden of Proof and
the Study of Molecular Evolution
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Darwin himself (Behe continued) set the
standard of proof for advocates of the theory of design in the Origin:
If it could be demonstrated that any complex
organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight
modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. But I can find no such case.7
Yet, Behe argued, "Examples of
irreducible complexity can be found on virtually every page of a biochemistry
textbook." Although the cilium is a striking example, because of its manifestly mechanical
aspects, other such systems abound:
Other examples of irreducible complexity
[include] aspects of blood clotting, closed circular DNA, electron transport, the
bacterial flagellum, telomeres, photosynthesis, transcription regulation -- virtually any
biochemical system.
Where can one go, asked Behe, to find
plausible step-by-step Darwinian scenarios for the origin of these complex systems?
"A good place to look for an answer to that question," he said, "is in the Journal
of Molecular Evolution (JME). JME was started "specifically to deal
with the topic of how evolution occurs on the molecular level." It has high standards
and is edited by prominent figures in the field of molecular evolution.
Yet, to the observer looking for Darwinian
explanations, JME can only be regarded as a great disappointment. Behe tallied the results
of the journal's past 10 years of publication:
JME has published 886 papers. Of
these, 95 discussed the chemical synthesis of molecules necessary for the origin of life,
44 proposed mathematical models to improve sequence analysis, 20 concerned the
evolutionary implications of current structures, three discussed biochemical properties of
current organisms, and 719 were analyses of protein or polynucleotide sequences. There
were zero papers discussing models for intermediates in the development of complex
biomolecular structures.
"If one looks at other journals or
books," he continued, "the story is the same." Sequence comparisons abound,
while models for the actual evolution of complex systems are hard to find.
"It is important to realize," Behe
said, in ending his talk, "that we are not inferring design from what we do not
know, but from what we do know. We are not inferring design to account for a black
box, but to account for an open box." While we may be shocked to find open boxes
speaking plainly of design, he said, "we must deal with our shock as best we can and
go on."
One can imagine that many listeners would
find Behe's talk compelling, but, in the end, intuitively unsatisfying. Such listeners
might reason as follows: "To be sure, the biological world is replete with complex
systems, for which we have no plausible or even sketchy naturalistic explanation. However,
it is the business of science to provide such explanations, and not something else.
Where a natural explanation is lacking, we place the problem on a shelf, marking it
'unsolved,' and if it gathers dust there, so be it. Science traffics, after all, in the
empirical. What philosophers or theologians care to do is their business. But don't ask scientists
to infer design when that inference goes against all that their enterprise stands
for!"
Behe would doubtless have his own sharp
answer to this line of argument. But the next two speakers, Stephen Meyer of Whitworth
College, and Paul Nelson (me), spoke directly to several variants or conceptual relatives
of the argument. I turn next, then, to Steve Meyer.
Stephen Meyer (Ph.D., History and Philosophy
of Science, Cambridge University, 1991) is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Whitworth
College in Spokane, Washington. Meyer's Cambridge dissertation, on methodological
questions in origin-of-life research, set him to thinking about a number of philosophical
claims that have been used to adjudicate (actually, to dismiss) the intelligent design
explanation for the origin of life.
Those claims hold that there are in
principle sound methodological reasons for refusing to allow design as an explanation
for the origin and diversity of life. However, Meyer contended, after critical examination
the soundness of the reasons dissolves away. There are therefore no compelling philosophical
grounds for excluding design; or, to put it another way, if judged by non-question
begging criteria design is fully as explanatory as any other cause.
Yet, Meyer noted, most biologists are
ill-disposed to see design as a genuine explanation. Their resistance is puzzling,
however, in the light of (a) the persistence of teleological language in biology, and (b)
the lack of progress in the reductionistic, naturalistic research program in the problem
of the origin of life.
Consider the persistence of teleology. As
Stanford historian of biology Timothy Lenoir has noted,
Teleological thinking has been steadfastly
resisted by modern biology. And yet, in nearly every area of research biologists are hard
pressed to find language that does not impute purposiveness to living forms.8
Biological objects, said Meyer, seem
designed. And attempts to render the appearance of design illusory, by showing that it is
a necessary consequence of natural laws acting at lower levels, have been less than
successful. Resistance to design as an explanation cannot stem, for instance, from the
achievements of the naturalistic thrust in origin-of-life research.
One of Meyer's own dissertation advisors, an
expert in the origin-of-life field, noted to Steve in 1989 (after returning from an
international con-ference on the topic, in Prague) that the question "How did life
arise naturalistically?" had in recent years acquired the potential to become a
spawning ground for scientific cranks -- so little was the field united by any one or even
small number of generally accepted theories. Francis Crick's agnosticism on the same
subject is well-known:
An honest man, armed with all the knowledge
available to us now, could only state that in some sense, the origin of life appears at
the moment to be almost a miracle, so many are the conditions which would have had to be
satisfied to get it going.9
Klaus Dose, another expert in the field,
found little cheer in the fruits of the last few decades:
More than 30 years of experimentation on the
origin of life in the fields of chemical and molecular evolution have led to a better
perception of the immensity of the problem of the origin of life on Earth rather than to
its solution. At present all discussions on principal theories and experiments in the
field end either in stalemate or in a confession of ignorance.10
Other such sentiments have been widely
expressed.
Why Exclude Design as
an Explanation?
top
"Why then the expectation," asked
Meyer, "that we will find the answer to the question in naturalistic terms?" Why
no consideration, whatsoever, for the possibility of a scientific theory of intelligent
design?
"For most scientists," he
continued, "there is a perception that the 'rules of science' forbid those types of
inferences -- that is, inferences to a pre-existent intelligence." Philosopher of
science Nancy Murphey casts the issue in terms of what she thinks science itself seeks,
namely, naturalistic explanations for all natural processes. "Christians and atheists
alike," Meyer quoted Murphey as arguing, "must pursue scientific questions in
our era without invoking a creator." Any reference to a creator ipso facto
leaves the realm of science and enters that of metaphysics and theology.
"This is the answer to our
question," said Meyer. "Our era is one which proscribes the possibility, which
outlaws the possibility of talking about creative intelligence as an explanatory entity
within science." But when exactly did this proscription arise? Nancy Murphey, noted
Meyer, admitted that the naturalistic definition of science has dominated for only about
130 years. "It's historically contingent," he continued. "Most of biology
prior to Darwin was in a creationist framework. Newton and Boyle, during the period of the
Scientific Revolution, were quite fond of making design arguments, and not just on the
basis of biology, but in optics and astronomy as well."
The issue can be framed as the
"categorical opposition" of the philosophical doctrine of methodological
naturalism versus intelligent design. Methodological naturalism simply does not admit the
possibility of intelligent design. One can accept the theory of intelligent design, of
course, but not as a scientific proposition. "Or, as I've heard many
times," joked Meyer, "it might be true, but it can't be science."
But is methodological naturalism, asked
Meyer, "purely an arbitrary convention?" If so, some people may no longer feel
themselves bound by it. On the other hand, if good reasons ground methodological
naturalism, "perhaps the 'rules of science' ought to continue as they are."
Demarcation Arguments
as 'Litmus Tests' for Scientific Standing
top
The ASA, Meyer noted, "tends to defer to
methodological naturalism as a convention, on the basis of 'what science does.' Our
secular colleagues, however," he continued, "do attempt to justify the
convention," offering arguments for a purely naturalistic science. Within the
philosophy of science proper, such arguments are generally called demarcation
arguments. Demarcation arguments attempt to distinguish "true science" from all
other human activities, in particular, from "pseudoscience, metaphysics, religion --
and other bad things of that sort." Although "that may sound facetious,"
Meyer continued, "there's an attempt for a distinction of epistemic value or
epistemic warrant, on the basis of some philosophical litmus test." For example, a
truly scientific theory must be falsifiable, testable, and explain by reference to
natural law. These are all examples of criteria that (putatively) distinguish true science
from pseudoscience.
"Now the main rap on intelligent
design," said Meyer, "is first of all that it's not naturalistic." But
methodological naturalism comes into play because design allegedly fails to meet the
standard demarcation criteria: it's not testable, doesn't explain by reference to natural
law, it's unobservable -- "you can't put God in a test tube and study Him."
Demarcation arguments of this sort are regularly given as reasons for completely rejecting
design as a possible explanation.
But within the philosophy of science,
"demarcation arguments have totally failed." This is a general judgment, said
Meyer, that can be nicely illustrated by a particular case. One of the things that emerged
from the 1981 Arkansas "equal time" (creation/evolution) trial was the ACLU's
skill at persuading the late Federal judge William Overton to accept its construal of the
philosophy of science. The philosophy of science promulgated by the ACLU excluded
young-earth creationism as being in principle nonscientific; creationism was
trapped philosophically under the demarcation arguments offered by expert witness Michael
Ruse.
Yet, in the wake of the trial, Ruse's
arguments were widely criticized in the philosophical community, Meyer noted, as
"setting the philosophy of science back 50 years." Ruse's arguments were
assembled from a "simplistic" logical positivism and the neo-positivism of Sir
Karl Popper. The trial then became a contest of "Popper versus Popper," as the
creationists themselves assumed the soundness of Popperian neo-positivism. Ruse and the
ACLU simply did a better job of persuading Overton that they, rather than the
creationists, were the true Popperians.
Popper has been important in the
development of the philosophy of science, allowed Meyer. But even after we give him his
full due, we must face the charge that Popper's philosophical theories fail to correspond
with the way science actually functions. "Ruse, who ought to have known better in the
early 80s," said Meyer, "put forward a definition of science that neither
evolutionary theory nor intelligent design could meet. Therefore there is already
culturally something fishy going on with demarcation arguments." Citing the
philosophers Martin Eger and Larry Laudan, Meyer noted that demarcation arguments --
although known to be deeply flawed by professional philosophers of science -- continue to
play a role in disputes like the creation/evolution controversy, or discussion of design.
The list of demarcation arguments against
design offered in the scientific literature is long. Intelligent design held not to be
scientific because (among other things):
1. It does not explain by natural law
2. It invokes unobservables
3. It is not testable
4. It does not make predictions
5. It is not falsifiable
6. It provides no mechanisms
"And on and on," said Meyer, adding
that he is currently looking for all such arguments, with a standing request to those
interested that any demarcation argument not already mentioned be sent to him for his
exhaustive catalogue.
When demarcation arguments are applied in
origins research (comprising all types of evolutionary theory and all types of intelligent
design theory), "one of two things obtain," Meyer said.
Either the arguments are applied in so narrow
a way as to exclude both naturalistic descent with modification and intelligent
design, or they are applied in a more liberal, loose way, and both intelligent design and
naturalistic descent must be included within science. Either they exclude both, if
they are applied consistently, or they include both.
"These are not scientific
arguments," stressed Meyer, "although you usually hear scientists making them.
These are not arguments about nature. These are arguments coming out of the philosophy of
science -- actually, very bad philosophy of science."
Whether organisms evolved by natural means
from a common ancestor, or were designed, is a factual question to be settled by the
evidence, Meyer urged, not by a priori philosophical arguments. "In some ways
what I'd like to do," he added, "is to put my own profession, the philosophy of
science, out of business," at least where the question of the history of life is
concerned. Legitimate factual questions are being "adjudicated by philosophical and
methodological litmus tests, not by the evidence itself."
The Criterion of
Explanation in Terms of Natural Law
top
The litmus tests fail when looked at closely.
Consider the criterion of explanation solely in terms of natural law, offered most
prominently in the creation/evolution dispute by the philosopher and historian of biology
Michael Ruse. On Ruse's construal of natural law, said Meyer, "everything else follow
from that -- falsifiability, testability, prediction, repeatability -- all these things
follow from science's reliance on natural law." No theory of creation or intelligent
design, however, explains by reference to natural law; hence, no theory of design can be
scientific.
However, many areas of natural science do not
explain solely by natural laws, but rather explain by referring to past events. In
many of the historical sciences, as in forensic inquiry (e.g., criminal detective
methods), the main explanatory work is done by a reconstructive scenario that, by
postulating an event or series of events, attempts to link as many of the relevant facts
or circumstances as possible. One begins with a set of facts and infers into the past to
the event (or events) that would best explain those facts.
Darwin's theory of common descent, for
instance, "attempts to infer from things we can see," said Meyer, "back to
an unobservable causal history. ... What's doing the explanatory work for Darwin is the
assertion that certain events -- unobservable transitional intermediates, if you will, in
the fossil record -- would explain what we see in the present." While natural laws
may play a background role in our assumptions, historical explanations (in evolutionary
theory, for instance) would not work without the key events they postulate.
There is a direct parallel here to the theory
of design, which postulates the past action (i.e., event) of a mind acting on matter. But
if explanations in terms of past events are inadmissible, design will be "ruled out
of court," said Meyer, "which is exactly what happened." Yet there seems to
be no good reason to exclude past events as explanations, especially since in practice
"we explain by individual past events all the time."
The Criterion of
Observability
top
"Ruse's argument," concluded Meyer,
"does not take into account the actual diversity of methods in science, or in the
historical sciences in particular." Other demarcation arguments fare no better. It is
often claimed, for instance, that "God" cannot be an explanatory term because it
describes an unobservable entity -- and science deals only with observables. "But if observation
is the hallmark of testability," said Meyer, "an awful lot of things in science
would be out of court." In a symposium at SMU in March 1992, the molecular biologist
Fred Grinnell argued that anything which cannot be measured, counted, or put in a test
tube -- in other words, directly observed --simply cannot be invoked in a scientific
explanation. "I asked Grinnell," said Meyer, "if he accepted the
double-helical structure of DNA, or many of the other inferred entities in molecular
biology." Science is rife with unobservables. Physics, geology, and other sciences
regularly employ them: "We infer from what we can see to what we can't
see." Darwinism, for example, refers to biological events in an unobservable past.
"But if observability is a necessary
condition for being scientific," said Meyer, "then the Darwinian theory doesn't
qualify as science either." Make the criterion of observability more liberal, and
"you save the scientific status of Darwinism. But you also let design in as
well."
"Again and again when I examined these
arguments," said Meyer, "I found that they do not discriminate." Applied
rigorously and neutrally, the arguments failed to exclude design without also excluding
Darwinian descent. Applied liberally, the arguments allowed both design and descent. One
could of course simply stipulate that "we want only to look at naturalistic
theories" (in which case demarcation arguments, if offered as objective philosophical
criteria, are in fact so much window-dressing to flummox the unsophisticated). But if one
assumes a position of genuine neutrality, demarcation arguments wield a philosophical
scythe that indiscriminately mows down all lines of origins research -- Darwinian and
design-based.
A Good Reason to
Include Design
top
There is, however, at least one good reason
to include design as a proper explanation. Meyer's own research in the philosophy
of science was on the methods of the historical sciences. "There is more than one
scientific method," he said. "In fact there are at least two." The
inductive sciences (by which we might understand physics, chemistry, and the other
primarily experimental sciences) are motivated by the question "How does nature normally
operate?" The historical sciences (by which we might understand cosmology,
geology, paleontology, evolutionary theory and biological systematics), on the other hand,
are motivated primarily by the question "How did this system or object come to be?"
These are logically distinct questions. In the latter case, when we ask how something came
to be, we explain by invoking causal narratives or patterns of events -- employing methods
often termed "abductive" or "retroductive" -- to find that set of
events that best accounts for the features of what we observe in the present.
This is "detective-style
reasoning," said Meyer, and while such reasoning certainly employs natural laws (the
bread-and-butter of the inductive or experimental sciences), those laws are insufficient
tools for answering the questions posed in the historical sciences. The point has been
appreciated well by evolutionary theorists defending their domain against the skepticism
of their more experimentally-minded colleagues. In evolutionary theory, says Stephen Jay
Gould, "we infer history from its results."
This means that testing, or theory
evaluation more generally, will also differ in important ways between the inductive and
historical sciences. As Darwin often argued to his correspondents, the theory of common
descent by natural selection had to be weighed comparatively, "vis-a-vis its
competitors." Explanations are judged by their relative power, and by their
consistency with what we know from the present.
"Can a theory of design be formulated to
meet these standards?" asked Meyer. Yes: the theory is attempting to answer a
"What happened?" question, and does so by postulating the past action of an
intelligent agent. "That's a perfectly appropriate answer," he said, "to a
perfectly appropriate historical question." Starting with distinctive features of
living systems (as discussed by Michael Behe, for instance), design attempts to account
for those features by referring them to a sufficient cause, namely, an intelligence. In
every respect, argued Meyer, design as a theory is logically fully consonant with the
types of answers, and methods of evaluation, common to the historical sciences.
Meyer's Conclusion
top
The origin of life, said Meyer, is a
scientific question that cannot be settled by philosophical gerrymandering or a priori
definitions. "It is an empirical question that must be left fully open to whatever
hypotheses come along. There's nothing within the philosophy of science that justifies the
exclusion of design."
Meyer ended his talk by reiterating those
features of living systems he regarded as explicable only by design: the conjunction of
small probability and specification, the existence of coded information, and the complex
functional interdependence of the components of organisms.
"The 'logic boards' of living
things," said Meyer, "are best explained by design." Yet the doctrine of
methodological naturalism stands in the way of our using the theory. We need to end
"this hear-no-evil, see-no-design" outlook, urged Meyer, for the good of
science.
I turn next to my talk -- the last of the
symposium.
For simplicity's sake, I shall refer to
myself in the first person, and ask the reader's indulgence for the informality. I am a
Ph.D. candidate in Philosophy at the University of Chicago, where I also studied
evolutionary theory and systematics. My dissertation treats the conceptual relationship of
the theory of common descent to theories about the causal structure of animal development.
It fell to me, by the request of the
symposium organizers, to answer the question of how a theory of design might be
practically applied by working biologists. But this question is, in a sense, premature. A
well-articulated theory of design is not yet at hand. Indeed, it may be some time before
such a theory is available for direct application in the day-to-day work of biologists.
But we can pose the question in a slightly
different form. If a scientist who implicitly or explicitly accepted methodological
naturalism were to lay that doctrine aside, and take the possibility of design seriously, How
would his or her scientific practice differ? Would it differ?
This question is best answered by considering
perhaps the most important standing objection to design, one that (I think) reflects a
profound antipathy to the theory throughout modern science and the philosophy of science.
I refer of course to the "God-of-the-gaps" objection, which is taken to show
design's theoretical bankruptcy and hence its uselessness for the real work of scientific
explanation. If this objection cannot be turned back, design will never gain a hearing
among its skeptics.
As it turns out, however, the God-of-the-gaps
objection is entirely generic. That is, the objection is an epistemological difficulty
that actually inflicts all scientific theories -- and therefore counts specially against
none.
The Explanatory Mosaic
top
We might put the God-of-the-gaps objection as
follows. Design, its critics argue, suggests no research of its own, and provides no
answers other than the vacuous. Rather, design is parasitic on what Elliott Sober
calls "the incompleteness of science."
Let me illustrate what I mean by
"parasitic" with a simple visual metaphor. Figure 4 depicts what I shall call "The Explanatory
Mosaic."
Now this is a conceptual, not physical,
space. Its boundaries are set by a question I suppose pretty much all of us want answered,
namely, "How did the biological world come to be?" By "the biological
world," I mean everything one might imagine falling under that phrase: the first
origin(s) of life, the origins of the major groups of plants and animals, the origins of
the complex molecular structures presented by Behe, and so on -- right down to the origin
of human consciousness.
We should note a couple of things about the
Explanatory Mosaic. First, many people are working on it, over a really vast theoretical
and empirical area. Most of the people have no (or only very indirect) contact with each
other. But, they are working on one or another aspect of the same problem ("How did
the biological world come to be?"). Thus, if we're going to have a coherent answer
when the mosaic is complete -- in other words, if we're going to have a filled-out pattern
that makes sense -- we're going to need a theory (a picture) to guide our work.
It's the theory that tells us what tiles go where in this vast space.
Secondly, work on the mosaic may proceed
episodically and locally. In some locations, the tiles may fall rapidly and easily into
place; while in other locations, the work may move slowly, or not at all. Indeed, tiles
once thought firmly situated may have to be torn out, so that a once-unified part of the
mosaic returns to a heap of unsolved puzzles. There's no guarantee that local explanatory
progress translates into progress elsewhere.
By the consensus of the scientific community,
neo-Darwinism (understood as the common descent of all organisms from a single ancestor,
by means of variation and selection) has nicely filled in many parts of the mosaic.Work is
proceeding with this general picture, as a guiding schema, very much in mind. We needn't
haggle over what percentage of the area has been filled in according to the neo-Darwinian
picture (we needn't take the metaphor that seriously), but most observers think
some progress has been made. We can represent those areas by the crosshatched parts of
Figure 4.
Problems With Filling
in the Evolutionary Picture
top
Yet, unsolved problems remain. While
evolutionists have a general idea of what the final mosaic will be, that is, the
common descent of all organisms with a central role for natural selection as the process
theory, they don't know much about the details. And, over the past two decades there has
been a rising level of discontent within neo-Darwinism about the sufficiency or even
necessity of it. Consider some recent expressions of unhappiness. From geneticist Martin
Kreitman:
Many of the simplest and most com- mon
patterns of morphological evolution still elude satisfactory explanation. In a recent
conversation, Richard Lewontin pointed out to me that many morphological characters are
essentially invariant within species -- the scutellar bristle number and position in Drosophila,
for example -- but are manifestly different between species. The "whole problem of
evolution," according to him, is to explain this seeming contradiction. Why, he
wanted to know, do characters like that exist?11
From developmental biologist Wallace Arthur:
One can argue that there is no direct
evidence for a Darwinian origin of a body plan -- black Biston betularia
[peppered moths] certainly do not constitute one! Thus in the end we have to admit that we
do not really know how body plans originate.12
From geneticists Bernard John and George
Miklos:
As unpalatable as it may seem to many
biologists, certain aspects of conventional evolutionary theory have become stalled, and
it is futile to pretend that continuing study along the well-worn, mathematically oriented
neo-Darwinian pathways will provide significant insights into key evolutionary phenomena.13
And so on. Other such worries can escalate
into disenchantment even with the theory of common descent, but that would take us too far
afield. The point is that large numbers of evolutionary theorists think neo-Darwinism has
ceased to work as the picture (if you will) that guides their labor.
Sure, the theory handles certain phenomena
well, but on the really big questions, such as the origins of the major groups, or of
complex structures, there is a diminishing conviction that neo-Darwinism is up to the
task. And as we take in the whole mosaic, of course, to include such problems as
the origin of life, neo-Darwinism is plainly insufficient (or inapplicable).
Do Design Explanations
Depend on the Incompleteness of Science?
top
So what does the design theorist do --
according to the God-of-the-gaps objection -- when he comes upon the incomplete
Explanatory Mosaic? He surveys the open areas, i.e., the unsolved problems, and wherever
they exist lays down a quick, easy, uniform veneer of design. (See Figure 5, area filled by vertical lines.) Do
you have an unsolved problem? It's no problem: God did it. The theory of design must be
true. Look at all these unsolved problems and open areas the theory so readily and
completely fills!
Here's how Elliott Sober puts the design
theorist's move:
This argument begins with the fact that there
are many features of the living world that evolutionary theory cannot now explain. The
origin of life, for instance, remains an active area of scientific research. ... Science
is shot through with ignorance. Doesn't this provide an opportunity for creationist
explanations to be pressed home?14
But, Sober continues, this doesn't follow:
Our current ignorance is no evidence for the
truth of any explanation, creationist or otherwise. The fact that we currently do
not understand various facts about life is no reason to think that God has intervened in
life's history.15
Why not? The answer can be seen by looking at
Figure 5. Suppose the crosshatched area
in the lower left-hand corner of the mosaic were to expand a bit. Research reveals
new evolutionary mechanisms, and thus resolves a long-standing problem in, say, the
adaptive modification of mammalian limbs. As that area expands, the area occupied by the
design theory necessarily shrinks.
But if design's area can shrink, then
nothing was there in the first place. If we imagine that, in Figure 5, the design
tiles (the vertical lines) were genuinely occupying explanatory space, then evolutionary
theory couldn't expand into the space occupied by design. That would be
geometrically impossible, the plane (within the boundaries set by the question) having
been completely tiled.
But (on the objection we're considering) the
area occupied by design necessarily shrinks as evolution expands. Thus, the explanatory
content of design is governed entirely by whatever problems happen to be unsolved by
evolutionary theory. As Sober puts it,
Creationists try to parlay the current
incompleteness of scientific knowledge into points in their favor. ... We can expect
creationists in the future to choose a different array of phenomena since many of the
problems that currently puzzle science probably will be sorted out in the future.16
Here we might press the question of why (on
this objection) design has no content, and necessarily retreats before the advance of
evolution. The usual answer says that the principal cause of design theory -- an
omnipotent, invisible deity -- is utterly inscrutable. Moreover, an inscrutable cause can
be invoked at will, wherever one pleases:
In its ultimate extension, [the design
hypothesis] represents what might be termed the 'Will of Allah' point of view: whatever
happens is God's choice. Putting it the other way around, God's choice is whatever
happens, and this means that a divinity can always be invoked without the possibility of
challenge.17
Scientists do not think they now have all the answers. That is why they continue to do
research. On the other hand, creationists have at hand an all-purpose explanation for any
observation you please. The origin of life, the distribution of modes of reproduction, and
everything else can be explained by a four-word hypothesis: "It was God's will."18
In general, the God-of-the-gaps objection
holds that unsolved problems are only that: unsolved problems. Design is parasitic because
it rides like a conceptual remora on the back of the prevailing naturalistic theory,
drawing whatever content it has from the shortcomings of that theory. As those
shortcomings are resolved, design is correspondingly diminished. Sober nicely expresses
this intuition, which motivates the God-of-the-gaps objection. "The past successes of
scientific explanation," he writes, "suggest that was is now inexplicable may
eventually be brought within the scope of scientific understanding."19
This objection has long troubled me, and I
have here tried to express it as forcefully as possible. How should it be answered?
What are the
"Gaps" in the Phrase "God of the Gaps"?
top
We might start by looking at the very phrase
"God-of-the-gaps." To what does the word "gap" here refer? Is the gap
in the world, among the phenomena? Of course not. The gap is given by -- is relative to --
some theory about the phenomena. The gap exists in our heads (as it were), because
a theory has posed a puzzle for which we do not have an answer: yet the theory also tells
us to expect to find an answer.20
But if the theory we are presupposing is false,
then the gap we want to fill, or the answer we are seeking, may not exist. Let's
return to the metaphor of the mosaic. If we presuppose the truth of naturalistic
evolution, then we will set to work filling the mosaic according to that picture.
It's the theory, after all, that tells us where to lay the tiles, or to try to lay the
tiles.
If the tiles won't go into place, however, we
have some grounds for thinking that the theory guiding everyone's work might not be true.
If the difficulties persist, and a pattern of unsolved problems emerges, we might wonder
whether another picture wouldn't do a better job of guiding research. That picture would
dissolve some or perhaps most of the "gaps" (research problems) of the older
picture, by rendering them ill-framed, or nonexistent.
Consider the puzzle of the naturalistic
origin of life. This "gap" arises for evolution because according to that theory
the parts must precede the whole: that is, the nonliving constituents of organisms must be
temporally and causally prior to organisms (first came methane, carbon monox-ide, ammonia,
and water; from these, amino acids; from these, proteins, and so on). Furthermore, only
"natural" causes may be employed in scientific explanation.
But there is nothing in the question,
"How did living things come to be?" -- the question accepted as valid by both
evolutionists and non-evolutionists as setting the boundaries of the mosaic, but not
determining its internal patterns -- that dictates the necessity or truth of either
evolutionary assumption. Indeed, with biological systems, the whole may well
precede its parts, and in the absence of some sound philosophical justification the
prohibition against design as a cause is arbitrary and question-begging.
Looking for a Theory of
Design with Positive Content
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If we take a design-based theory as our
guiding picture, however, the gap created by the evolutionary puzzle "How did life
arise naturalistically?" wouldn't be so much filled by design as dissolved
by it. "How did life arise naturalistically?" as Kuhn writes of the problems
posed by theories generally, is:
... a puzzle for whose very existence the
validity of the paradigm must be assumed. Failure to achieve a solution discredits only
the scientist and not the theory. Here ... the proverb applies: 'It is a poor carpenter
who blames his tools.'21
It is not a poor carpenter who blames the
blueprint, however, when he finds that it dictates an impossible structure. It is fully
rational for a scientist who recognizes the intractability of his research puzzle to
abandon it, if he discovers that the puzzle presupposes something false. (Indeed it would
be irrational to do otherwise.) It is likewise fully rational for a scientist to find
another puzzle to solve, one posed by a theory grounded on different principles.
To do so, of course, we carpenters (or
scientific mosaic-builders) must have a theory of design that projectsits own patterns
into the space established by the question, "How did living things come to be?"
It would then not b