Darwin
Under the Microscope

By Michael J. Behe
Michael J. Behe, associate professor of biochemistry at
Lehigh University,
is the author of "Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution."
The New York Times, October 29, 1996, Tuesday Final
Section A; Page 25; Column 2; Editorial Desk
BETHLEHEM, PA Pope John Paul II's statement last week
that evolution is "more than just a theory" is old news to a Roman Catholic
scientist like myself.
I grew up in a Catholic family and have always believed in
God. But beginning in parochial school I was taught that He could use natural processes to
produce life. Contrary to conventional wisdom, religion has made room for science for a
long time. But as biology uncovers startling complexity in life, the question becomes, can
science make room for religion?
In his statement, the Pope was careful to point out that it
is better to talk about "theories of evolution" rather than a single theory. The
distinction is crucial. Indeed, until I completed my doctoral studies in biochemistry, I
believed that Darwin's mechanism -- random mutation paired with natural selection -- was
the correct explanation for the diversity of life. Yet I now find that theory incomplete.
In fact, the complex design of the cell has provoked me to
stake out a distinctly minority view among scientists on the question of what caused
evolution. I believe that Darwin's mechanism for evolution doesn't explain much of what is
seen under a microscope. Cells are simply too complex to have evolved randomly;
intelligence was required to produce them.
I want to be explicit about what I am, and am not,
questioning. The word "evolution" carries many associations. Usually it means
common descent -- the idea that all organisms living and dead are related by common
ancestry. I have no quarrel with the idea of common descent, and continue to think it
explains similarities among species. By itself, however, common descent doesn't explain
the vast differences among species.
That's where Darwin's mechanism comes in.
"Evolution" also sometimes implies that random mutation and natural selection
powered the changes in life. The idea is that just by chance an animal was born that was
slightly faster or stronger than its siblings. Its descendants inherited the change and
eventually won the contest of survival over the descendants of other members of the
species. Over time, repetition of the process resulted in great changes -- and, indeed,
wholly different animals.
That's the theory. A practical difficulty, however, is that
one can't test the theory from fossils. To really test the theory, one has to observe
contemporary change in the wild, in the laboratory or at least reconstruct a detailed
pathway that might have led to a certain adaptation.
Darwinian theory successfully accounts for a variety of
modern changes. Scientists have shown that the average beak size of Galapagos finches
changed in response to altered weather patterns. Likewise, the ratio of dark- to
light-colored moths in England shifted when pollution made light-colored moths more
visible to predators. Mutant bacteria survive when they become resistant to antibiotics.
These are all clear examples of natural selection in action. But these examples involve
only one or a few mutations, and the mutant organism is not much different from its
ancestor. Yet to account for all of life, a series of mutations would have to produce very
different types of creatures. That has not yet been demonstrated.
Darwin's theory encounters its greatest difficulties when it
comes to explaining the development of the cell. Many cellular systems are what I term
"irreducibly complex." That means the system needs several components before it
can work properly. An everyday example of irreducible complexity is a mousetrap, built of
several pieces (platform, hammer, spring and so on). Such a system probably cannot be put
together in a Darwinian manner, gradually improving its function. You can't catch a mouse
with just the platform and then catch a few more by adding the spring. All the pieces have
to be in place before you catch any mice.
An example of an irreducibly complex cellular system is the
bacterial flagellum: a rotary propeller, powered by a flow of acid, that bacteria use to
swim. The flagellum requires a number of parts before it works -- a rotor, stator and
motor. Furthermore, genetic studies have shown that about 40 different kinds of proteins
are needed to produce a working flagellum.
The intracellular transport system is also quite complex.
Plant and animal cells are divided into many discrete compartments; supplies, including
enzymes and proteins, have to be shipped between these compartments. Some supplies are
packaged into molecular trucks, and each truck has a key that will fit only the lock of
its particular cellular destination. Other proteins act as loading docks, opening the
truck and letting the contents into the destination compartment.
Many other examples could be cited. The bottom line is that
the cell -- the very basis of life -- is staggeringly complex. But doesn't science already
have answers, or partial answers, for how these systems originated? No. As James Shapiro,
a biochemist at the University of Chicago, wrote, "There are no detailed Darwinian
accounts for the evolution of any fundamental biochemical or cellular system, only a
variety of wishful speculations."
A few scientists have suggested non-Darwinian theories to
account for the cell, but I don't find them persuasive. Instead, I think that the complex
systems were designed -- purposely arranged by an intelligent agent.
Whenever we see interactive systems (such as a mousetrap) in
the everyday world, we assume that they are the products of intelligent activity. We
should extend the reasoning to cellular systems. We know of no other mechanism, including
Darwin's, which produces such complexity. Only intelligence does.
Of course, I could be proved wrong. If someone demonstrated
that, say, a type of bacteria without a flagellum could gradually produce such a system,
or produce any new, comparably complex structure, my idea would be neatly disproved. But I
don't expect that to happen.
Intelligent design may mean that the ultimate explanation for
life is beyond scientific explanation. That assessment is premature. But even if it is
true, I would not be troubled. I don't want the best scientific explanation for the
origins of life; I want the correct explanation.
Pope John Paul spoke of "theories of evolution."
Right now it looks as if one of those theories involves intelligent design.
Copyright © 1997 Michael Behe. All rights
reserved. International copyright secured.
File Date: 11.04.96
This data file may be reproduced in its entirety for
non-commercial use.
A return link to the Access Research Network web site would be appreciated.
Page development by Premier Publications
for Access Research Network,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA.