This is the correct distinction (this same discussion has been going on in
another group). One thing that should be kept in mind is that macroevolution
cannot occur without microevolution. One species does not become another
species due to a single mutation. Instead a multitude of mutations may occur
which eventually leads to the categorization of two different species. Also
remember what we define as a "species" is simply a categorization by
scientists. Why are intelligent design theorists willing to accept this
categorization system created by biologists?

Cheri

----- Original Message -----
From: "Rod Hetzel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2002 1:14 PM
Subject: RE: Creationism as Science??


Paul and Paul:

Thanks for your responses.  I haven't done a whole lot of reading on this
issue but am probably as informed (or uninformed) as the average
psychologist.  However, I have heard that some intelligent design theorists
make a distinction between macroevolution and microevolution.  As I
understand it, macroevolution is any evolutionary change at or above the
level of species and refers to the change of one species to another species.
Microevolution is any evolutionary changes within species and refers to
changes in the frequency within a population or a species of its alleles and
their effects on the form, or phenotype, of organisms that make up that
population or species.  Perhaps macroevolution could be described as
between-species evolution and microevolution as within-species evolution.
My understanding of it is that intelligent design theorists agree that
microevolution occurs, but do not believe there is sufficient justification
for macroevolution.  Is this also your understanding of the intelligent
design position?  How would you respond to that position?

Rod


______________________________________________
Roderick D. Hetzel, Ph.D.
Department of Psychology
LeTourneau University
Post Office Box 7001
2100 South Mobberly Avenue
Longview, Texas  75607-7001

Office:   Heath-Hardwick Hall 115
Phone:    903-233-3312
Fax:      903-233-3246
Email:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage: http://www.letu.edu/people/rodhetzel


-----Original Message-----
From: Paul C. Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2002 8:56 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: RE: Creationism as Science??


Rod -
"Expertise" is FAR too strong a word <grin>. I'm not a biologist of any
sort, nor an expert of any sort on evolution, though I do have enough
understanding to see through the transparent creationist objections (it
doesn't take much for that).

A good starting place is always alt.talk.origins. Here is the entry page to
their work on "irreducible complexity":

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/behe.html

Here's an example, by H. Allen Orr:
http://bostonreview.mit.edu/br21.6/orr.html

======================== (beginning with a piece that Mike quoted...) So the
question facing biologists is clear: Do irreducibly complex systems
represent an unbridgeable evolutionary chasm? If so, Darwinism is in a bad
way and Behe has made an astonishing discovery. If not, Behe's case
collapses and he has succeeded only in misleading large numbers of people.
Behe, never shy, has already cast his vote: the discovery of design, he
assures us, is "so significant that it must be ranked as one of the greatest
achievements in the history of science," rivaling "those of Newton and
Einstein, Lavoisier and Schrodinger, Pasteur, and Darwin."

Reducible Complexity

The first thing you need to understand about Behe's argument is that it's
just plain wrong. It's not that he botched some stray fact about evolution,
or that he doesn't know his biochemistry, but that his argument-as an
argument-is fatally flawed. To see this we need to first get clear about
what kinds of solutions to irreducible complexity are not open to Darwinism.

First it will do no good to suggest that all the required parts of some
biochemical pathway popped up simultaneously by mutation. Although this
"solution" yields a functioning system in one fell swoop, it's so hopelessly
unlikely that no Darwinian takes it seriously. As Behe rightly says, we gain
nothing by replacing a problem with a miracle. Second, we might think that
some of the parts of an irreducibly complex system evolved step by step for
some other purpose and were then recruited wholesale to a new function. But
this is also unlikely. You may as well hope that half your car's
transmission will suddenly help out in the airbag department. Such things
might happen very, very rarely, but they surely do not offer a general
solution to irreducible complexity.

Behe's colossal mistake is that, in rejecting these possibilities, he
concludes that no Darwinian solution remains. But one does. It is this: An
irreducibly complex system can be built gradually by adding parts that,
while initially just advantageous, become-because of later
changes-essential. The logic is very simple. Some part (A) initially does
some job (and not very well, perhaps). Another part (B) later gets added
because it helps A. This new part isn't essential, it merely improves
things. But later on, A (or something else) may change in such a way that B
now becomes indispensable. This process continues as further parts get
folded into the system. And at the end of the day, many parts may all be
required.

The point is there's no guarantee that improvements will remain mere
improvements. Indeed because later changes build on previous ones, there's
every reason to think that earlier refinements might become necessary. The
transformation of air bladders into lungs that allowed animals to breathe
atmospheric oxygen was initially just advantageous: such beasts could
explore open niches-like dry land-that were unavailable to their lung-less
peers. But as evolution built on this adaptation (modifying limbs for
walking, for instance), we grew thoroughly terrestrial and lungs,
consequently, are no longer luxuries-they are essential. The punch-line is,
I think, obvious: although this process is thoroughly Darwinian, we are
often left with a system that is irreducibly complex. I'm afraid there's no
room for compromise here: Behe's key claim that all the components of an
irreducibly complex system "have to be there from the beginning" is dead
wrong. ========================
In short, one of the problems with the Irreducible Complexity argument is
that it falls prey to the seductive notion that natural selection is
teleological - that it "aims" in some manner towards some not-yet-achieved
goal. It's not surprising at all that creationists would find that a natural
assumption, of course, and the general anthropomorphic arrogance ("if it's
complex, it must have been the product of someone like us") that we all seem
to share adds to the seductiveness of the argument, and the blinders to the
real claims of evolution.

That's only one example that I can retrieve while sitting here, but I have
recently read others elsewhere from the usual "big names" (Gould, Dawkins).
They're not hard to find, and I'm quite certain that Gould's new tome covers
it.

Paul Smith
Alverno College
Milwaukee



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