About 10 years ago, I
came across a delightful article in the Italian journal, Rivista di
Biologia. Titled "Be Cautious, Mr. Bates," the article challenged
the Darwinian explanation of how the Viceroy butterfly came to look so
much like the Monarch.
The most interesting
part of the article was the way the authors chided biology professors
for presenting speculative ideas as facts.
"Many generations
have listened passively to these presentations," they noted. "We feel
obligated, however, to warn our readers that these peaceful days are
coming to an end and that we must prepare for strife."
Why? One reason was
an organization called Students for Origins Research (SOR). "The members
of this organization support creationism," the authors said, "but they
are not naïve fundamentalists such as those in the Scopes case in 1925.
These people have been educated (or coached) in the weaknesses of
Darwinism. . . . They are preparing themselves for classroom debate."
They urged their
readers to "avoid the usual practice of leading all discussions in such
a way as to glorify Darwinian theory. With SOR students lurking in the
class, frail scenarios will no longer be passively accepted."
As director of SOR at
the time, I got a laugh out of the article. With a part-time volunteer
staff of less than a dozen graduate and undergraduate students, and a
scruffy tabloid journal that went out twice a year, we were hardly the
kind of threat that the article implied.
The article was right
about one thing, however: skepticism is on the rise in college biology
classrooms. Books like Phillip Johnson's Defeating Darwinism by
Opening Minds, William Dembski's Intelligent Design and
Michael Behe's Darwin's Black Box have encouraged countless
students to speak out. As a consequence, noted one observer, biology
professors across the country "are finding students coming to class with
mental defenses prepared so they will not be 'brainwashed' into
accepting evolutionary theory."
That skepticism is
about to get another boost from a new book by Berkeley-educated
biologist Jonathan Wells. Titled Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth,
this book shows that much of what introductory textbooks teach about
evolution is demonstrably wrong. Worse yet, it documents the fact that
evolutionary biologists have known it for years.
More than
Misprints
Icons
was born out of Jonathan Wells' own experience as a student.
"During my years as a
physical science undergraduate and biology graduate student at the
University of California, Berkeley, I believed almost everything I read
in my textbooks," Wells recounts. "I knew that the books contained a few
misprints and minor factual errors, and I was skeptical of philosophical
claims that went beyond the evidence, but I thought that most of what I
was being taught was substantially true."
But then he made a
troubling discovery.
"As I was finishing
my Ph.D. in cell and developmental biology," he writes, "I noticed that
all of my textbooks dealing with evolutionary biology contained a
blatant misrepresentation."
The texts contained
drawings of embryos that supposedly provide compelling evidence of
evolution.
But there was a
problem, says Wells: "As an embryologist, I knew they were false."
Although he didn't
stir up a ruckus, the discovery weighed on his mind. He began to notice
that other illustrations were also wrong--important illustrations
depicting evidence that Darwinists have long touted as "proof" of
evolution. These pictures included such perennial favorites as Haeckel's
embryos, peppered moths, the evolutionary "tree of life," Darwin's
finches, the ape-to-man transition and others.
These images--and
their accompanying evolutionary stories--are so widely used in textbooks
that some have been called "icons of evolution." In his book, Wells
examines 10 of the most common icons, showing that each of them
seriously misrepresents the truth--either by presenting assumptions as
observed facts, concealing raging scientific controversies or directly
contradicting well-established scientific evidence.
Wrong From the
Start
Among the most
blatantly false icons are the embryo drawings that attracted Wells'
attention. The pictures were drawn in the 1800s by German zoologist
Ernst Haeckel (pronounced heckle), an enthusiastic supporter of Darwin's
theory of evolution.
Haeckel proposed that
the development of an organism's embryo replays the evolutionary history
of that organism's species. He believed that as new organs or structures
evolved, these features were tacked onto the end of an organism's
embryonic development. As a result, we can virtually see the organism's
evolutionary history in the embryo's development. At the beginning of
its development, the embryo looks like its earliest ancestor. But as it
develops and more recent features appear, it resembles later
ancestors--until it finally reaches the point where it resembles its own
species. Haeckel called this the biogenetic law.
On the basis of this
law, he reasoned that the embryos of various organisms should look
virtually identical early in development, but grow increasingly
different over time--reflecting their evolutionary descent from a common
ancestor. And when he made drawings of the embryos of several backboned
animals, this is exactly what his drawings showed.
Unfortunately,
Haeckel had more enthusiasm for his theory than for reality, and faked
many of his drawings.
"In some cases,"
Wells says, "Haeckel used the same woodcut to print embryos that were
supposedly from different classes [of animals]. In others, he doctored
his drawings to make the embryos look more alike than they really were.
His contemporaries repeatedly criticized him for these
misrepresentations, and charges of fraud abounded in his lifetime."
In addition to
doctoring his drawings, Haeckel also misrepresented the embryos'
development. The stage of development that Haeckel called the "first"
stage actually occurs about midway through the embryos' development. And
although the embryos at this midway stage look faintly similar (if you
squint hard and step back a bit), embryos at the earlier stages differ
greatly.
Thus, instead of
starting out virtually identical and then diverging, the embryos differ
from the very beginning. About midway through development they converge
to a vague similarity. Then they diverge again to their final forms.
Wells points out that
biologists have known this for over a century. In 1894, for example,
embryologist Adam Sedgwick rejected the idea that embryos start out
similar and diverge over time, stating that this view is "not in
accordance with the facts of development."
Sedgwick noted that
he could distinguish between a chicken and a duck as early as the second
day of development.
"Every embryologist
knows that [early differences] exist and could bring forward innumerable
instances of them," he said. "I need only say with regard to them that a
species is distinct and distinguishable from its allies from the very
earliest stages all through development" (emphasis in the original).
Sedgwick's
observations are confirmed by modern embryology.
In spite of this,
Wells found that Haeckel's drawings are almost universally touted in
biology textbooks as powerful evidence for evolution. This is even the
case in some advanced college texts written by eminent scientists.
Haeckel's drawings
appear, for example, in the latest edition of Molecular Biology of the
Cell, written by National Academy of Sciences president and
distinguished cell biologist Bruce Alberts and his colleagues. The text
states that "early developmental stages of animals whose adult forms
appear radically different are often surprisingly similar," and that
Darwinian evolution explains why "embryos of different species so often
resemble each other in their early stages and, as they develop, seem
sometimes to replay the steps of evolution."
Peppered Myth
Perhaps the biggest
surprise in Wells' book is what he reveals about one of the Darwinism's
most sacred icons: the peppered moth.
If you've taken a
biology class in the last 30 years, you've probably seen photos of tree
trunks with peppered moths resting on them. And you have no doubt been
told that these moths are a prime example of "evolution in action,"
demonstrating the power of natural selection to change a creature's
physical characteristics.
What you haven't been
told, however, is that there is a problem with both the photos and the
story behind them.
The story begins in
the woodlands of England during the early 1800s. At that time the vast
majority peppered moths were whitish with black speckles. Although some
peppered moths were colored coal-black, they were very rare at that
time.
As the industrial
revolution took root during the 19th century, however, scientists
noticed that moth populations near heavily-polluted cities had become
mostly dark-colored. Scientists dubbed this shift industrial melanism
and began to speculate about its cause.
In 1896, British
biologist J.W. Tutt suggested that industrial melanism was caused by
natural selection. He noted that in unpolluted woodlands, where tree
trunks were covered with lichens, light-colored moths would be much
better camouflaged than dark ones. As a result, predatory birds would
spot and eat far more dark moths than light ones.
In industrialized
areas, however, where airborne pollution had killed off the lichens and
darkened the trees, the situation would be reversed. The dark moths
would be better camouflaged, and the birds would catch more
light-colored moths.
This eventually
became the accepted view, and was apparently confirmed by studies
conducted in the early 1950s by British biologist Bernard Kettlewell.
In these studies,
Kettlewell marked several hundred moths of both colors and released them
during the daytime onto tree trunks. For the next several nights he set
out traps to recapture as many moths as possible. He then compared the
percentage of light-colored moths he'd recaptured with the percentage of
dark ones. This told him which type of moth survived better.
As Kettlewell
expected, the recapture rate for dark-colored moths in polluted areas
was about twice that for light-colored moths. In unpolluted areas the
opposite was true. This was such ringing confirmation of natural
selection that Kettlewell called his findings "Darwin's missing
evidence." Other studies in the 1960s and 1970s seemed to back him up.
Of course, critics
have long pointed out that changes in the relative size of moth
populations tell us nothing about how such things as moths originated in
the first place.
But in the 1980s
another problem emerged. Researchers discovered that peppered moths
almost never rest on tree trunks. Instead, they apparently rest on the
undersides of small horizontal branches in the tree canopy.
By releasing moths
onto tree trunks during the day, Kettlewell had created an artificial
situation. "Peppered moths are night-fliers, and normally find resting
places on trees before dawn," Wells says. When released during the day,
in illumination bright enough for human eyes, such moths can be expected
to choose their resting places as quickly as possible--often in the
wrong place. "The moths that Kettlewell released in the daytime remained
exposed, becoming easy prey for predatory birds."
This undermines the
credibility of Kettlewell's studies, as well as later studies by others,
which used dead specimens glued or pinned to tree trunks.
It also undermines
the credibility of the photos displayed in so many textbooks. Since tree
trunks are such an unusual resting place, Wells says, "pictures of
peppered moths on tree trunks must be staged. Some are made using dead
specimens that are glued or pinned to the trunk, while others use live
specimens that are manually placed in desired positions. Since peppered
moths are quite torpid in daylight, they remain where they are put."
These methods have
also been used for television documentaries. One biologist admitted to a
Washington Times reporter in 1999 that he had once glued dead specimens
to a tree trunk for a TV documentary on peppered moths.
"Staged photos may
have been reasonable when biologists thought they were simulating the
normal resting places of peppered moths," Wells concedes. "By the late
1980s, however, the practice should have stopped."
Speak No Evil
The obvious question
raised by these revelations is why? Why is this stuff still in
textbooks? Why haven't scientists put up a fuss?
One reason is that
many biologists simply don't know about the errors. "Most biologists
work in fields far removed from evolutionary biology," Wells says. "Most
of what they know about evolution, they learned from biology textbooks
and the same magazine articles and television documentaries that are
seen by the general public."
Other biologists,
Wells says, "are aware of difficulties with a particular icon because it
distorts the evidence in their own field. . . . But they may feel that
this is just an isolated problem, especially when they are assured that
Darwin's theory of evolution is supported by overwhelming evidence from
other fields. If they believe in the fundamental correctness of
Darwinian evolution, they may set aside their misgivings about the
particular icon they know something about."
Some lapses,
however, are more difficult to account for. Such is the case with
Harvard paleontologist and science historian Stephen Jay Gould. In his
writings, Gould has expressed an ongoing concern for the quality of
science education in America. For example, when the Kansas state board
of education voted in August 1999 to de-emphasize some of the more
speculative aspects of evolution in the state's science education
standards, Gould responded with a broadside published in Time.
"As patriotic
Americans," Gould wrote, "we should cringe in embarrassment that, at the
dawn of a new, technological millennium, a jurisdiction in our heartland
has opted to suppress one of the greatest triumphs of human discovery."
Unfortunately,
however, Gould's patriotism does not extend to confronting textbook
publishers over such fraudulent material as Haeckel's embryos. Although
Gould has known about Haeckel's fraud for over twenty years--he wrote
and published a book on Haeckel's ideas in 1977--it wasn't until
biochemist Michael Behe exposed the problem in the August 13, 1999, New
York Times that Gould decided to speak out..
In the March 2000
issue of Natural History, Gould blasted textbooks writers for the
"mindless recycling that has led to the persistence of these drawings in
a large number, if not a majority, of modern textbooks." He also blamed
"creationists" like Behe for capitalizing on the error.
But who's more at
fault here: the mindless recyclers, or the scholar who kept silent until
a "creationist" blew the whistle?
A Royal Pain
With the publication
of Icons, prominent Darwinists are bracing for trouble. Speaking
at the University of California, San Diego, Eugenie Scott, director of
the National Center for Science Education, held up a copy of the book
and told her listeners that every one of them should be aware of it.
"This book will be a
royal pain in the fanny," she said.
Other Darwinists
have made similar remarks.
That's really too
bad. Rather than circling the wagons, shouldn't scientists and educators
be more concerned about the facts? Wouldn't it be better to simply admit
the errors--even if means conceding points to the "other side?"
You'd think so. But
until that happens, classroom skepticism will only grow worse.
And those SOR
students will have a heyday.
Mark Hartwig is
science and worldview editor for Focus on the Family and a fellow of the
Seattle-based Discovery Institute. For several years, he was director of
Students for Origins Research and managing editor of the scholarly
journal,
Origins Research, now published as Origins and Design.
Copyright © 2000
Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright
secured.
File Date: 2.26.01