The seventh chapter of Wells' book could be summed up in a single sentence: "biology doesn't need no steeekin' evolution!" Wells argues that, because medicine and agriculture were already doing just fine prior to Darwin's publication of Origin, clearly then, these fields (and others) haven't benefited from an application of evolutionary principles in the time from 1859 to present day, and that Dobzhansky's "nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution" is one big joke.
Wells focuses on medicine and agriculture because these are two fields that we all benefit from, and are more easily understood than biological disciplines that are a bit more removed from the common man. Animal and plant breeding and domestication is something that resonates more with middle America than the speciation events Wells describes in Chapter 5 (review of that yet to come), and certainly the great strides made in medicine are familiar even to those who don't have much of an interest in the field. Wells claims that these fields have been "darwined"; that "Darwinists steal credit for scientific breakthroughs to which they contributed nothing," and calls it a form of "intellectual larceny." (pg. 80-81):
Generations of breeders have been darwined. Mendel has been darwined. Jenner and Semmelweis have been darwined. Fleming, Florey, Chain, and Waksman have been darwined. So have the real pioneers of modern biology. They've all been darwined. (pg. 81)
Wells claims this because, as I noted in the first paragraph, it is his contention that modern biology owes nothing to evolution, but instead, evolution owes everything to other fields.
Yet most of the fundamental disciplines in modern biology were pioneered by scientists who lived before Darwin was born. These pioneers include the sixteenth-century anatomist Andreas Vesalius, the sixteenth-century physiologist William Harvey, and the seventeenth-century botanist John Ray. They include the seventeenth-century founders of microbiology, Robert Hooke and Anton van Leeuwenhoek; the eighteenth-century founder of systematics, Carolus Linneaus; and the eighteenth-century founder of modern embryology, Caspar Friedrich Wolff. Even paleontology, which Darwinists now treat as theirs, was founded before Darwin's birth by Georges Cuvier.
Of course, no one is making the argument that Darwin discovered biology! Wells doesn't once mention, however, another famous quote by Ernest Rutherford: "In science there is only physics; all the rest is stamp collecting." In the days before Darwin, biology was not united behind a common, unifying theory, and it was much like "stamp collecting:" figuring out knowledge for the sake of knowledge, but not having a puzzle upon which to place the pieces to form a more logical, coherent pattern. Evolution gives us this.
This is why some scientists are still dismayed that an understanding of evolution doesn't guide some biology-dependent fields in the way that it should. Wells seizes on one such lamentation by quote-mining Harvard biologist Marc Kirschner:
"Over the last one hundred years, almost all of biology has proceeded independent of evolution, except evolutionary biology itself." Although he lamented this situation, Kirschner acknowledged: "Molecular biology, biochemistry, physiology, have not taken evolution into account at all." (pg. 80).
Of couse, as usual, putting the previous paragraph alongside Kirschner's quote gives it the context needed to understand where Kirschner is coming from:
If anything, Kirschner and Gerhart hope their book will have an impact at least as substantial on their colleagues in biology. For too long, they say, researchers in its different domains-from evolutionists in the field to cell biologists in the lab-have remained isolated. ''I wouldn't call it an antagonism as much as one not knowing anything about the other," Gerhart offers.
So they're calling for biologists to pay attention to disciplines outside their own niche a bit more, which makes a huge amount of sense (and even moreso if one realizes that Dr. Kirschner leads a department of systems biology, which takes an interdisciplinary approach to investigating biological research). Additionally, this article was written in the midst of the Dover trial, where Michael Behe--a biochemist who clearly feels that evolution doesn't benefit his own work--was testifying.
So, what of Wells' specific claims about medicine and Darwinism? I will address three here in more detail: hospital pathogens, antibiotics, and influenza vaccination, all of which Wells claims owe nothing to evolution.
The Hygiene Hypothesis
As I noted above, Wells includes Ignaz Semmelweis (yep, that guy again) as a science pioneer who has been "darwined." I've mentioned Semmelweis previously as a major contributor to my field (indeed, I put his observations about handwashing and disinfection at the top of my list). Wells mentions him because he claims that public health measures such as personal hygiene, sewage systems, and safer water supplies have been responsible for the rise of modern medicine, rather than anything related to "Darwinism." And as a public health professional, I agree that there is a grain of truth in there. Public health measures certainly represented a dramatic step forward in the reduction of communicable diseases, and even today, we see outbreaks of illness where these essential foundations of society break down.
However, basic hygiene can only go so far. A number of other factors have combined over the past century to make us healthier as well, including better nutrition, vaccination, and improved medical care. And while, as Kirschner laments, not all medical fields have embraced evolutionary thinking as much as biologists wish they had, it is certainly critical for my own field of microbiology.
Microbial virulence and evolution
Wells mentions the mortality within Viennese hospitals in the mid-nineteenth century due to infectious agents. Despite improvements in hygiene, we still see this today. Strains of bacteria and viruses isolated from hospitals tend to be nastier than those occurring out in the general population, for a number of reasons. Indeed, rather than being any kind of a challenge to evolutionary theory, these nosocomial (hospital-based) transmission events and their associated increase in virulence are an excellent case in point where the implementation of evolutionary biology provided the framework necessary to understand these infections. Paul Ewald addresses this phenomenon:
Without an evolutionary framework for understanding pathogen virulence, researchers would have no reason for expecting to find particularly virulent endemic pathogens in hospitals. The only serious attempts to explain the apparently high-level of pathogen virulence in hospitals involved the linking of virulence to another characteristic associated with hospitals: antibiotic resistance. The emergence of antibiotic-resistant organisms in hospitals in concert with the use of the antibiotics led researchers to conclude that high levels of antibiotic use caused the emergence of resistant organisms and to speculate that antibiotic-resistant organisms might be inherently more virulent than their antibiotic-sensitive counterparts. Yet when infections caused by resistant nosocomial organisms are compared with sensitive (generally nosocomial) infections, the former are only sometimes found to be associated with more severe infections. Even when they are associated with more severe disease, any differences in inherent virulence tend to be confounded with other factors, such as increased severity due to lowered effectiveness of antibiotics...
...After virulence-enhancing mechanisms are well understood, pathogens can be assayed for their virulence directly. Thus Clostridium difficile pathogens isolated from prolonged nosocomial outbreaks are predicted to be more toxigenic than C. difficile isolated from the outside community. Similarly, nosocomial Escherichia coli are predicted to have virulence-enhancing characteristics (e.g., invasiveness, adherence) more often than community strains.
Additionally, evolution is at the core of the entire field of bioinformatics, as Sandy notes. Using genomic sequence comparisons (with the assumption of common ancestry) has been a huge benefit to biologists, allowing us to investigate the primate origin of HIV (or trace the source of an HIV infection), as well as track the spread of dangerous influenza viruses and even study influenza viruses that disappeared around the time my grandparents were born. Wells may argue that really biochemistry and virology are the fields employed here to study these (after all, PCR isn't dependent on evolutionary biology), but it's the theory of evolution that allows us to make any sense of the data. And without that framwork to analyze it, what use is it?
Antibiotic resistance
Wells and other creationists often dismiss antibiotic resistance as "just microevolution" and insignificant to the bigger picture of evolutionary biology. As Wells notes, the generation of antibiotic resistant organisms does not "involve the origin of a new species. Tuberculosis bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics are still tuberculosis bacteria." (page 77) This is the same argument we heard from Casey Luskin on avian influenza ("it's still influenza!"), and while Answers in Genesis promotes the same idea, they claim it's "natural selection, but not evolution." Wells goes even farther than AiG, however, trying to argue against even "natural" selection in the proliferation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
The clinical use of antibiotics creates a highly artificial situation. Antibiotic-producing microbes must be isolated from their natural surroundings and grown in pure culture with special nutrients. Then the antibiotic has to be purified and concentrated to a degree never seen in nature. When the antibiotic is finally administered to a patient, there is nothing "natural" about what follows. The greenhouses and livestock pens of domestic breeders are more natural than a hospital room or a doctor's office.
It seems that what Wells is arguing here is that antibiotic resistance has little relevance to evolution, because it's not "natural" selection--it's artificial. Of course, this is absurd, as evolution can occur whether it's via man or via "mother Nature." Wells and others, however, downplay "microevolution" and antibiotic resistance in particular as insignificant because they know that these offer powerful evidence for evolutionary theory, and that even a layman can easily understand it. Indeed, Wells actually gets about a paragraph or so mostly right on pages 77-78, describing factors which contribute to the emergence of antibiotic resistance. However, he blows it again by the middle of page 78, writing that antibiotic resistance "...spreads from microbe to microbe--mechanisms involving gene transfer among organisms rather than Darwinian descent with modification." Yes, that is the sound of jaws dropping everywhere--isn't the acquisition of genes and the passing of them on to progeny "descent with modification?" Additionally, while this horizontal gene transfer is one mechanism for the development of antibiotic resistance, it's certainly not the only way bacteria become resistant (Mike has more here).
Wells also argues that evolution doesn't provide any assistance in designing new antibiotics--that it's more about the skill of the chemists than evolution. However, while certainly no one is underestimating the importance of chemists, an understanding of evolution can lead to better drugs, such as this example here where the authors selected for novel enzymes with increased ability to detoxify target drugs. Evolution sometimes can be a better "designer" than even our best chemists, and increasingly this is finding applications in other fields as well.
Evolution and influenza vaccination
Wells says:
Darwinists claim that their theory is needed to deal with viruses such as influenza that "evolve" from year to year. But the preparation of flu vaccines depends on techniques from the fields of virology, immunology, and biochemistry--not evolutionary biology.
Again, I suppose if one takes a very narrow view of "preparation of flu vaccines," Wells is a bit more on-target (although his narrow view is somewhat analogous to saying that one only needs assembly line workers to produce a car, and throwing out all the work done by engineers), but it's clear from the rest of the chapter that he's talking about vaccination in the broader context than just the physical manufacture of the vaccine. The fact is, creating each year's influenza vaccine is dependent on a huge number of people in many different fields, and an understanding of the evolution of the virus is critical.
Influenza vaccination starts with careful tracking of circulating influenza viruses, looking specifically for strains that may increase or decrease in frequency over time. This, in turn, is only understood in an evolutionary framework: strains may out-compete others (due, for example, to resistance to antiviral drugs, while others may become less common (due to a high level of host immunity, for example). These findings are then extrapolated and predictions are made about what strains will be most common in the coming year. It's only at this point that the actual manufacture of the vaccine begins--but this isn't the end of the story; there's still more use for evolutionary biology. Even with a vaccine on hand, insights that come from the fusion of evolutionary biology with epidemiology and virology provide robust mathematical models that allow us to best plan how to use vaccines, especially if it's a time when they may be scarce (for example, in a pandemic situation). Though we can't easily predict the trajectory of influenza virus evolution, we certainly use information obtained from its study to help plan for future outbreaks.
The pragmatic fallacy
As I mentioned at the beginning, the finale of Wells' chapter is just one big logical fallacy, suggesting evolution isn't central to biology because 1) biology got along fine before Darwin; and 2) it's not very useful to many fields, anyway. This is somewhat the reverse of the pragmatic fallacy, where one argues that something is true because it provides results. Wells claims that evolution doesn't provide results, therefore, its validity can be called into question. However, even if that were true (and I've given reasons above why it's not), the validity of a theory doesn't depend upon its applications. This is something that's been addressed in both the scientific literature and the blogosphere in recent days, after Jerry Coyne's recent article in Nature making a similar point following an encounter with the DI's Casey Luskin. Coyne says:
In the end, the true value of evolutionary biology is not practical but explanatory. It answers, in the most exquisitely simple and parsimonious way, the age-old question: "How did we get here?" It gives us our family history writ large, connecting us with every other species, living or extinct, on Earth. It shows how everything from frogs to fleas got here via a few easily grasped biological processes. And that, after all, is quite an accomplishment.
The fact of the matter is that it wouldn't be an issue even if evolution didn't produce anything considered "useful" by Wells or the rest of the population. It doesn't make evolution any less true even if it's only brought in as "an interesting narrative gloss" following a "breakthrough," as Wells quotes fellow creationist Phil Skell as saying. And while evolutionary biologists may never offer as many direct applications to medicine or other areas that use biology such as, say, immunologists or molecular biologists, that doesn't mean that those fields are somehow more valid or correct than the study of evolution is. After all, if we judged correctness of an idea by its applications, where would something like intelligent design end up on that scale?
[This will be posted at The Panda's Thumb in the coming days. If you've not already checked it out yet, see other chapter reviews of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Darwinism and Intelligent Design here.
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Intelligent Design is useful: with proper tweaks, it can confirm peoples into what they had believed all along: the Bible is True, and Science is puffery.
"SUSPISCION BREEDS CONFIDENCE"
Where are all the practical applications to the Big Bang theory? Astronomers got along just fine before it existed, so therefore that theory must be unimportant and probably wrong.
Wells:
According to R. M. Henig's "A monk in the garde" Mendel darwined himself or why should he have sent a reprint of his work to Darwin.
Does the "Darwined" claim deserve its own index to Creationist Claims entry?
Dave S: they gained intellectual satisafaction, and lots of other things in cosmology and astronomy made more sense. Oh, and Fred Hoyle's Steady State ideas got pooped on. But your point is a good one
The "Big Bang" theory suggested that the universe may be expanding. This led to tests to determine if it were indeed expanding. This led to the realization that it was expanding at an excellerated rate. This gave rise to the dark matter and dark energy theories.
Every theory gets tested and re-tested. Each new fact gets added to the knowledge pile and must fit the existing theory or that theory needs to be revised. Mendel wasn't darwinized, his findings substantiated Darwin.
By the logic of 'microevolution' I shouldn't be able to walk to New York city. Obviously, small steps could never lead to big changes. They are too blind to see...
Hi Dr Smith, magical name Tara!
I have one for Darwinism and evolution
If we are descended from the mudsapper or guppie
and subsequently from monkeys
We cannot claim to be 'naturally' carnivours
Most monkeys are not carnivours, though some do turn savage, it would appear man became carnivour, and there are tales of cannibalism in some tribes in Africa and the Amazons, as encountered or related by the 'first' white explorers in earlier centuries.
As an epidemiologist, would you say we are just mutant complex cells, as in following fertilization. ie: if we were aliens and saw a being driving a steel vehicle, would we say earthlings were simply 'evolved' steel, or would we stop to see who or what the driver IS.
And would you say that the human being undergoes the whole darwinian evolutionary process, as a sperm swimming until it reaches an egg to fertilise, becoming an embryo, losing its tail as it grows limbs, etc... breathing thru gills in a watery environment during the period of gestation, and finally emerging to take his/her first breath.
PS - Beautiful smile!
@The above: Man whut?
Mendel certainly annotated his copy of the Origin of Species and considered that his discoveries could be very important. However there is no evidence that Mendel and Darwin corresponded. For instance, Henig gave no sources for his statement. A recent publication states that Darwin did not know of Mendel's work, and would probably not have ascribed it any significance. The extent of Charles Darwin's knowledge of Mendel Andrew Sclater 2006: Journal of Biosciences vol. 31 no. 2, 191-193
1
Better selected to be darwined up than created to be dembskied down.
Hi Quasar,
It's rather hard to parse what you're asking, but I'll give it a shot.
I don't know who's claiming we're "naturally" carnivores, or what exactly your point is with this. We're omnivores, and eat a bit of everything. Monkeys and apes likewise have varied diets--chimps, for example, eat fruit, leaves, insects, occasionally birds and even smaller primates, in addition to a variety of other foods.
Not sure what you're asking here.
You're talking about ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny, or the "recapitualtion law." No, And no, I wouldn't say that.
The claim that agriculture hasn't benefitted from evolutionary biology is also a big joke. The basis of animal breeding is estimating the genetic quality of individuals, i.e. their breeding value. The reason for this is that this is what will best predict the value of the offspring.
The theory for this was laid down in 1918 be R.A. Fisher (pdf, for masochists only), in the celebrated paper where he showed how Darwinism and Mendelism could be combined. Obviously nothing to do with evolution...
Bob
I think the bit about cars is one of those silly Behe-style analogies. The point being that if we didn't know anything about how cars are made, then how could we say for sure they didn't arise naturally? And then going backwards from there to say that, therefore, how can we know that the things we think arose naturally (i.e., all plant an animal species via evolution) weren't actually designed? Except I think Quasar is also conflating the Driver of the car with the Designer of life. It's just sort of a sloppy argument on the whole, really, and like most ID analogies relies on a big non sequitur sitting right in the middle.
I have a question for you, Quasar. If you doubt it is possible for aliens to know that cars were designed and not evolved, then how is it there are PYGMIES + DWARFS???
Tara, you write:
But wouldn't Behe deny feeling that way about evolution?
ID folk love to claim that they are misrepresented by their critics. They are very slippery and inconsistent with each other, which makes it hard to generalize about "ID Theory" in any way without being prone to the charge of misrepresenting somebody.
In Behe's case, I think he would say that he does not deny evolution; and he might indeed say that it benefits--and maybe even that it's crucially important for--his work. I don't think he denies evolution, but denies only that evolution occured purely through natural processes without the intervention of a Designer.
I didn't say he denies evolution, but I've never read anything where he expressed any respect for it, nor suggests it's useful to his field. Indeed, he usually sneers (like here) and puts forth arguments like Wells': essentially, that his own field has also been "darwined."
i try , thanks