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August 28, 2005
Show Me the Science
By DANIEL C. DENNETT
Blue Hill, Me.
PRESIDENT BUSH, announcing this month that he was in
favor of teaching about "intelligent design" in the schools,
said, "I think that part of education is to expose people to
different schools of thought." A couple of weeks later,
Senator Bill Frist of Tennessee, the Republican leader, made
the same point. Teaching both intelligent design and
evolution "doesn't force any particular theory on anyone,"
Mr. Frist said. "I think in a pluralistic society that is
the fairest way to go about education and training people
for the future."
Is "intelligent design" a legitimate school of scientific
thought? Is there something to it, or have these people been
taken in by one of the most ingenious hoaxes in the history
of science? Wouldn't such a hoax be impossible? No. Here's
how it has been done.
First, imagine how easy it would be for a determined band
of naysayers to shake the world's confidence in quantum
physics - how weird it is! - or Einsteinian relativity. In
spite of a century of instruction and popularization by
physicists, few people ever really get their heads around
the concepts involved. Most people eventually cobble
together a justification for accepting the assurances of the
experts: "Well, they pretty much agree with one another, and
they claim that it is their understanding of these strange
topics that allows them to harness atomic energy, and to
make transistors and lasers, which certainly do work..."
Fortunately for physicists, there is no powerful
motivation for such a band of mischief-makers to form. They
don't have to spend much time persuading people that quantum
physics and Einsteinian relativity really have been
established beyond all reasonable doubt.
With evolution, however, it is different. The fundamental
scientific idea of evolution by natural selection is not
just mind-boggling; natural selection, by executing God's
traditional task of designing and creating all creatures
great and small, also seems to deny one of the best reasons
we have for believing in God. So there is plenty of
motivation for resisting the assurances of the biologists.
Nobody is immune to wishful thinking. It takes scientific
discipline to protect ourselves from our own credulity, but
we've also found ingenious ways to fool ourselves and
others. Some of the methods used to exploit these urges are
easy to analyze; others take a little more unpacking.
A creationist pamphlet sent to me some years ago had an
amusing page in it, purporting to be part of a simple
questionnaire:
Test Two
Do you know of any building that didn't have a builder?
[YES] [NO]
Do you know of any painting that didn't have a painter?
[YES] [NO]
Do you know of any car that didn't have a maker? [YES]
[NO]
If you answered YES for any of the above, give details:
Take that, you Darwinians! The presumed embarrassment of
the test-taker when faced with this task perfectly expresses
the incredulity many people feel when they confront Darwin's
great idea. It seems obvious, doesn't it, that there
couldn't be any designs without designers, any such
creations without a creator.
Well, yes - until you look at what contemporary biology
has demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt: that natural
selection - the process in which reproducing entities must
compete for finite resources and thereby engage in a
tournament of blind trial and error from which improvements
automatically emerge - has the power to generate
breathtakingly ingenious designs.
Take the development of the eye, which has been one of
the favorite challenges of creationists. How on earth, they
ask, could that engineering marvel be produced by a series
of small, unplanned steps? Only an intelligent designer
could have created such a brilliant arrangement of a
shape-shifting lens, an aperture-adjusting iris, a
light-sensitive image surface of exquisite sensitivity, all
housed in a sphere that can shift its aim in a hundredth of
a second and send megabytes of information to the visual
cortex every second for years on end.
But as we learn more and more about the history of the
genes involved, and how they work - all the way back to
their predecessor genes in the sightless bacteria from which
multicelled animals evolved more than a half-billion years
ago - we can begin to tell the story of how photosensitive
spots gradually turned into light-sensitive craters that
could detect the rough direction from which light came, and
then gradually acquired their lenses, improving their
information-gathering capacities all the while.
We can't yet say what all the details of this process
were, but real eyes representative of all the intermediate
stages can be found, dotted around the animal kingdom, and
we have detailed computer models to demonstrate that the
creative process works just as the theory says.
All it takes is a rare accident that gives one lucky
animal a mutation that improves its vision over that of its
siblings; if this helps it have more offspring than its
rivals, this gives evolution an opportunity to raise the bar
and ratchet up the design of the eye by one mindless step.
And since these lucky improvements accumulate - this was
Darwin's insight - eyes can automatically get better and
better and better, without any intelligent designer.
Brilliant as the design of the eye is, it betrays its
origin with a tell-tale flaw: the retina is inside out. The
nerve fibers that carry the signals from the eye's rods and
cones (which sense light and color) lie on top of them, and
have to plunge through a large hole in the retina to get to
the brain, creating the blind spot. No intelligent designer
would put such a clumsy arrangement in a camcorder, and this
is just one of hundreds of accidents frozen in evolutionary
history that confirm the mindlessness of the historical
process.
If you still find Test Two compelling, a sort of
cognitive illusion that you can feel even as you discount
it, you are like just about everybody else in the world; the
idea that natural selection has the power to generate such
sophisticated designs is deeply counterintuitive. Francis
Crick, one of the discoverers of DNA, once jokingly credited
his colleague Leslie Orgel with "Orgel's Second Rule":
Evolution is cleverer than you are. Evolutionary biologists
are often startled by the power of natural selection to
"discover" an "ingenious" solution to a design problem posed
in the lab.
This observation lets us address a slightly more
sophisticated version of the cognitive illusion presented by
Test Two. When evolutionists like Crick marvel at the
cleverness of the process of natural selection they are not
acknowledging intelligent design. The designs found in
nature are nothing short of brilliant, but the process of
design that generates them is utterly lacking in
intelligence of its own.
Intelligent design advocates, however, exploit the
ambiguity between process and product that is built into the
word "design." For them, the presence of a finished product
(a fully evolved eye, for instance) is evidence of an
intelligent design process. But this tempting conclusion is
just what evolutionary biology has shown to be mistaken.
Yes, eyes are for seeing, but these and all the other
purposes in the natural world can be generated by processes
that are themselves without purposes and without
intelligence. This is hard to understand, but so is the idea
that colored objects in the world are composed of atoms that
are not themselves colored, and that heat is not made of
tiny hot things.
The focus on intelligent design has, paradoxically,
obscured something else: genuine scientific controversies
about evolution that abound. In just about every field there
are challenges to one established theory or another. The
legitimate way to stir up such a storm is to come up with an
alternative theory that makes a prediction that is crisply
denied by the reigning theory - but that turns out to be
true, or that explains something that has been baffling
defenders of the status quo, or that unifies two distant
theories at the cost of some element of the currently
accepted view.
To date, the proponents of intelligent design have not
produced anything like that. No experiments with results
that challenge any mainstream biological understanding. No
observations from the fossil record or genomics or
biogeography or comparative anatomy that undermine standard
evolutionary thinking.
Instead, the proponents of intelligent design use a ploy
that works something like this. First you misuse or
misdescribe some scientist's work. Then you get an angry
rebuttal. Then, instead of dealing forthrightly with the
charges leveled, you cite the rebuttal as evidence that
there is a "controversy" to teach.
Note that the trick is content-free. You can use it on
any topic. "Smith's work in geology supports my argument
that the earth is flat," you say, misrepresenting Smith's
work. When Smith responds with a denunciation of your misuse
of her work, you respond, saying something like: "See what a
controversy we have here? Professor Smith and I are locked
in a titanic scientific debate. We should teach the
controversy in the classrooms." And here is the delicious
part: you can often exploit the very technicality of the
issues to your own advantage, counting on most of us to miss
the point in all the difficult details.
William Dembski, one of the most vocal supporters of
intelligent design, notes that he provoked Thomas Schneider,
a biologist, into a response that Dr. Dembski characterizes
as "some hair-splitting that could only look ridiculous to
outsider observers." What looks to scientists - and is - a
knockout objection by Dr. Schneider is portrayed to most
everyone else as ridiculous hair-splitting.
In short, no science. Indeed, no intelligent design
hypothesis has even been ventured as a rival explanation of
any biological phenomenon. This might seem surprising to
people who think that intelligent design competes directly
with the hypothesis of non-intelligent design by natural
selection. But saying, as intelligent design proponents do,
"You haven't explained everything yet," is not a competing
hypothesis. Evolutionary biology certainly hasn't explained
everything that perplexes biologists. But intelligent design
hasn't yet tried to explain anything.
To formulate a competing hypothesis, you have to get down
in the trenches and offer details that have testable
implications. So far, intelligent design proponents have
conveniently sidestepped that requirement, claiming that
they have no specifics in mind about who or what the
intelligent designer might be.
To see this shortcoming in relief, consider an imaginary
hypothesis of intelligent design that could explain the
emergence of human beings on this planet:
About six million years ago, intelligent genetic
engineers from another galaxy visited Earth and decided that
it would be a more interesting planet if there was a
language-using, religion-forming species on it, so they
sequestered some primates and genetically re-engineered them
to give them the language instinct, and enlarged frontal
lobes for planning and reflection. It worked.
If some version of this hypothesis were true, it could
explain how and why human beings differ from their nearest
relatives, and it would disconfirm the competing
evolutionary hypotheses that are being pursued.
We'd still have the problem of how these intelligent
genetic engineers came to exist on their home planet, but we
can safely ignore that complication for the time being,
since there is not the slightest shred of evidence in favor
of this hypothesis.
But here is something the intelligent design community is
reluctant to discuss: no other intelligent-design hypothesis
has anything more going for it. In fact, my farfetched
hypothesis has the advantage of being testable in principle:
we could compare the human and chimpanzee genomes, looking
for unmistakable signs of tampering by these genetic
engineers from another galaxy. Finding some sort of user's
manual neatly embedded in the apparently functionless "junk
DNA" that makes up most of the human genome would be a Nobel
Prize-winning coup for the intelligent design gang, but if
they are looking at all, they haven't come up with anything
to report.
It's worth pointing out that there are plenty of
substantive scientific controversies in biology that are not
yet in the textbooks or the classrooms. The scientific
participants in these arguments vie for acceptance among the
relevant expert communities in peer-reviewed journals, and
the writers and editors of textbooks grapple with judgments
about which findings have risen to the level of acceptance -
not yet truth - to make them worth serious consideration by
undergraduates and high school students.
SO get in line, intelligent designers. Get in line behind
the hypothesis that life started on Mars and was blown here
by a cosmic impact. Get in line behind the aquatic ape
hypothesis, the gestural origin of language hypothesis and
the theory that singing came before language, to mention
just a few of the enticing hypotheses that are actively
defended but still insufficiently supported by hard facts.
The Discovery Institute, the conservative organization
that has helped to put intelligent design on the map,
complains that its members face hostility from the
established scientific journals. But establishment hostility
is not the real hurdle to intelligent design. If intelligent
design were a scientific idea whose time had come, young
scientists would be dashing around their labs, vying to win
the Nobel Prizes that surely are in store for anybody who
can overturn any significant proposition of contemporary
evolutionary biology.
Remember cold fusion? The establishment was incredibly
hostile to that hypothesis, but scientists around the world
rushed to their labs in the effort to explore the idea, in
hopes of sharing in the glory if it turned out to be true.
Instead of spending more than $1 million a year on
publishing books and articles for non-scientists and on
other public relations efforts, the Discovery Institute
should finance its own peer-reviewed electronic journal.
This way, the organization could live up to its
self-professed image: the doughty defenders of brave
iconoclasts bucking the establishment.
For now, though, the theory they are promoting is exactly
what George Gilder, a long-time affiliate of the Discovery
Institute, has said it is: "Intelligent design itself does
not have any content."
Since there is no content, there is no "controversy" to
teach about in biology class. But here is a good topic for a
high school course on current events and politics: Is
intelligent design a hoax? And if so, how was it perpetrat-
ed?
Daniel C. Dennett, a professor of
philosophy at Tufts University, is the author of "Freedom
Evolves" and "Darwin's Dangerous Idea." |