Richard DawkinsThe consensus on the scientific validity of Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection varies even between evolution scientists.

Richard Dawkins, perhaps the most famous advocate of evolution in the twenty-first century, explained that natural selection represents a “non-random survival of randomly varying hereditary instructions” in the article “The Illusion of Design,” published in the Natural History Magazine.

While Dawkin’s explanation of natural selection is widely popular, a consensus amongst evolution scientists remains a contentious issue.

In What Darwin Got WrongJerry Fodor and Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini deliver a stunning exposé on Dawkins’s inane assertion that natural selection is a logical theory and non-random.

Seasoned by decades of scientific investigation, Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini begin by demonstrating that even “Darwin’s theory of natural selection is fatally flawed.” Not only flawed, but they also view the concept as simply an “intentional fallacy.”

Fodor (pictured right) and Piattelli-Palmarini are not lone critics. With over 20 pages of references, the authors demonstrate that the theory of natural selection is no more than circular reasoning: a tautology. Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini explain –Jerry Fodor

“There is at the heart of adaptations theories of evolution, a confusion between (1) the claim that evolution is a process in which creatures with adaptive traits are selected and (2) the claim that evolution is a process in which creatures are selected for their adaptive traits… Darwinism is committed to inferring (2) from (1).”

Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini conclude, “We think this argument, although ubiquitous in the literature, is fallacious.”

Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini also address Dawkins’ issue of “non-random survival” by pointing out that non-random processes require a mechanism to overcome entropy—randomness. The obvious question is – what is the mechanism that natural selection uses to overcome nature’s tendency toward randomness?

Massimo Piattelli-PalmariniTo answer this question, Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini (pictured left) quote Gabriel Dover (2006), the British geneticist that coined the term “molecular drive”: “Selection is not a process as such with predictable outcomes based on fixed, selective ‘powers’ of individual genes controlling aspects of phenotype.”

The evidence demonstrates that natural selection does not deliver “predictable outcomes.” Lack of evidence for a predictable outcome highlights that selection does not have an operational mechanism to overcome randomness and increase biological complexity—the essence of evolution.

Despite over 150 years since The Origin of Species publication, a natural law governing natural selection as a non-random driver of speciation has yet to be validated scientifically. Darwin’s dilemma intensifies.

Consensus

Contrary to Dawkins’ assertion, natural selection is a driver of extinction, not evolution. What is the role of natural selection, then? For Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini –

“We think of natural selection as tuning the piano, not composing the melody.”

While they may disagree on natural selection, they share the same worldview. As Fodor and Piattelli-Palmarini explain –

“[We are] out-right, card-carrying, sign-up, dye-in-the-wool, no-holds-barred atheists.”

The problems with natural selection explain, in part, why there continues to be no twenty-first-century scientific consensus on evolution. Natural selection, ironically, was Darwin’s biggest problem. In his own words –

“Natural selection… is by far the most serious special difficulty which my theory has encountered.”

Since 1859, evolutionary scientists have increasingly appreciated Darwin’s angst over Darwin’s central thesis – natural selection.

Italian geneticistThe theory of evolution remains a minefield of competing ideas; not one is scientifically valid. In the words of Italian geneticist Giuseppe Sermonti (pictured right) –

“Science has taken on the great wager… and lost.”

 From a dilemma, Darwin developed global phenomena.

Genesis

Linnnaeus, Carl IIScientific evidence, however, is compatible with the Genesis account. As Carolus Linnaeus (pictured left), the Swedish botanist who formalized the modern system of naming organisms, during the Scientific Revolution explains –

“I saw the infinite, all-knowing, and all-powerful God from behind.… I followed His footsteps over nature’s fields and saw everywhere an eternal wisdom and power, an inscrutable perfection.”

Evolution exists only as a philosophy, not as a scientifically valid theory.


Refer to the Glossary for the definition of terms and to Understanding Evolution to gain insights into understanding evolution.

 

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