Friday, March 7, 2008

A Dying Theory

I interrupt my previously scheduled blog on truth for this important (but almost tiresome) announcement...

The following article is posted here to show what is really going on behind the scenes with "evolution."

Read it and weep -- or, rejoice, whatever your position dictates.


Mazur: Altenberg! The Woodstock of Evolution?

Altenberg! The Woodstock of Evolution?


By Suzan Mazur

It's not Yasgur's Farm, but what happens at the Konrad Lorenz Institute in Altenberg, Austria this July promises to be far more transforming for the world than Woodstock. What it amounts to is a gathering of 16 biologists and philosophers of rock star stature – let's call them "the Altenberg 16" – who recognize that the theory of evolution which most practicing biologists accept and which is taught in classrooms today, is inadequate in explaining our existence. It's pre the discovery of DNA, lacks a theory for body form and does not accomodate "other" new phenomena. So the theory Charles Darwin gave us, which was dusted off and repackaged 70 years ago, seems about to be reborn as the "Extended Evolutionary Synthesis".

Papers are in. MIT will publish the findings in 2009 – the 150th anniversary of Darwin's publication of the Origin of Species. And despite the fact that organizers are downplaying the Altenberg meeting as a discussion about whether there should be a new theory, it already appears a done deal. Some kind of shift away from the population genetic-centered view of evolution is afoot.

Indeed, history may one day view today's "Altenberg 16" as 19th century England's "X Club" of 9 – Thomas Huxley, Herbert Spencer, John Tyndall, et al. – who so shaped the science of their day.

Here then are the Altenberg 16:


John Beatty, University of British Columbia


Sergey Gavrilets, University of Tennessee


David Sloan Wilson, Binghamton University


Greg Wray, Duke University


Michael Purugganan, New York University


Eva Jablonka, Tel-Aviv University


John Odling-Smee, Oxford University


David Jablonski, University of Chicago


Massimo Pigliucci, SUNY Stony Brook


Stuart Newman, New York Medical College


Gerd Muller, University of Vienna


Gunter Wagner, Yale University


Marc Kirschner, Harvard University


Werner Callebaut, Hasselt University


Eors Szathmary, Collegium Budapest


Alan Love, University of Minnesota

A central issue in making a new theory of evolution is how large a role natural selection , which has come to mean the weeding out of traits that don't favor survival, gets to play.

Natural selection was only part of Darwin's Origin of Species thinking. Yet through the years most biologists outside of evolutionary biology have mistakenly believed that evolution is natural selection.

A wave of scientists now questions natural selection's relevance, though few will publicly admit it. And with such a fundamental struggle underway, the hurling of slurs such as "looney Marxist hangover", "philosopher" (a scientist who can't get grants anymore), "crackpot", is hardly surprising.

When I asked esteemed Harvard evolutionary geneticist Richard Lewontin in a phone conversation what role natural selection plays in evolution, he said, "Natural selection occurs."


Richard Lewontin

Lewontin thinks it's important to view the living world holistically. He says natural selection is not the only biological force operating on the composition of populations. And whatever the mechanism of passage of information from parent to offspring contributing to your formation, what natural selection addresses is "do you survive?"

In an aside, Lewontin noted natural selection's tie-in to capitalism, saying, "Well, that's where Darwin got the idea from, that's for sure. . . He read the stock market every day. . .How do you think he made a living?"

Stanley Salthe, a natural philosopher at Binghamton University with a Ph.D. in zoology -- who says he can't get published in the main stream media with his views – largely agrees with Lewontin.


Stanley Salthe

But Salthe goes further. He told me the following:

"Oh sure natural selection's been demonstrated. . . the interesting point, however, is that it has rarely if ever been demonstrated to have anything to do with evolution in the sense of long-term changes in populations. . . . Summing up we can see that the import of the Darwinian theory of evolution is just unexplainable caprice from top to bottom. What evolves is just what happened to happen."

Several months ago, Salthe hosted an intense email debate among leading evolutionary thinkers which I was later let in on. It followed the appearance of an article by Rutgers University philosopher Jerry Fodor in the London Review of Books called "Why Pigs Don't Have Wings".

In the piece, Fodor -- who told me he left MIT because he wanted to be closer to opera in New York -- essentially argues that biologists increasingly see the central story of Darwin as wrong in a way that can't be repaired.


Jerry Fodor

When I called Fodor to discuss his article, he joked that he was now in the Witness Protection Program because he'd been so besieged following the LRB piece. But we met for coffee anyway, on Darwin's birthday, as frothy snowflakes floated to ground around Lincoln Center. After a cappuccino or two, Fodor summed things up saying we've got to build a new theory and "all I'm wanting to argue is that whatever the story turns out to be, it's not going to be the selectionist story".

Fodor also told me that "you can't put this stuff in the press because it's an attack on the theory of natural selection" and besides "99.99% of the population have no idea what the theory of natural selection is".

Fodor noted in the LRB article that evolutionary investigators are looking to the "endogenous variables" for answers, which leaves plenty of room for interpretation. On that point there is considerable agreement.

But Richard Lewontin told me he resents evolutionary biology being "invaded by people like Jerry Fodor and others" as well as by some from within the field who don't really know the "mechanical details down to the last".

Evolutionary biologist and philosopher Massimo Pigliucci is also critical of Fodor for not seeing "the big picture". Pigliucci is a principal architect of the "Altenberg 16" meeting as well as a participant. That rare combination -- a consummate scientist with a sense of humor!

I met him one afternoon across the street from the New York Public Library during a break from his research. He had a birthday gift in one arm. Pigliucci says he enjoys life.

But while he thinks Fodor is "dead wrong" about natural selection becoming irrelevant to the theory of evolution, he does recognize the value philosophers, in general, bring to science. Several of the Altenberg 16 participants are, in fact, philosophers – including, of course, Pigliucci.

Pigliucci says philosophers have two roles to play in science. One is to keep scientists – who are focused on the details – honest by looking from a distance and asking the big questions: "Well, is the paradigm that you're working with, in fact, working? Is it useful? Could it be better?"

The second is as public intellectuals. He thinks some of the best responses he's seen against Intelligent Design and Creationism, for instance, have been by philosophers. Pigliucci's philosophy web site Rationally Speaking carries the words of the Enlightenment's Marquis de Condorcet describing a public intellectual as one who devotes "him or herself to the tracking down of prejudices in the hiding places where priests, the schools, the government and all long-established institutions had gathered and protected them".

So what are those other engines of evolution that threaten to decommission natural selection – those "endogenous variables" -- of which Jerry Fodor speaks in his now infamous "Why Pigs Don't Have Wings" article?

Pigliucci cites epigenetic inheritance as one of the mechanisms that Darwin knew nothing about. He says there is mounting empirical evidence to "suspect" there's a whole additional layer chemically on top of the genes that is inherited but is not DNA. Darwin, of course, did not even know of the existence of DNA.

Lewontin asks whether it's "suspect" or "know"?

Nevertheless, these kinds of phenomena are part of what's loosely being called self-organization , in short a spontaneous organization of systems. Snowflakes, a drop of water, a hurricane are all such spontaneously organized examples. These systems grow more complex in form as a result of a process of attraction and repulsion.

So, coming up with a "sound" theory for form is one of the big challenges for the Altenberg 16.

Developmental biologist Stuart Kauffman is clearly one who thinks we must expand evolutionary theory. Kauffman, now head of the Biocomplexity and Informatics Institute at the University of Calgary, is known for his decades-long investigations into self-organization. He's been described by one evolutionary biologist as a "very creative man, try reading one of his books" who said in the next breath that "if he [Kauffman] really put an effort into understanding evolutionary biology -- the basic theoretical framework that we have -- I think he could have come a lot further".

Meanwhile, Kauffman's had a breathtaking career, beginning as a medical doctor, honored as a MacArthur fellow (genius) and has worked with Nobel prize winner Murray Gell-Mann at the Santa Fe Institute where he first studied self-organization. Looking at simple forms like the snowflake, he noted that its "delicate sixfold symmetry tells us that order can arise without the benefit of natural selection". Kauffman says natural selection is about competition for resources and snowflakes are not alive -- they don't need it.


Stuart Kauffman

But he reminded me in our phone conversation that Darwin doesn't explain how life begins, "Darwin starts with life. He doesn't get you to life."

Thus the scramble at Altenberg for a new theory of evolution.

But Kauffman also describes genes as "utterly dead". However, he says there are some genes that turn the rest of the genes and one another on and off. Certain chemical reactions happen. Enzymes are produced, etc. And that while we only have 25,000 to 30,000 genes, there are many combinations of activity.

Here's what he told me over the phone:

"Well there's 25,000 genes, so each could be on or off. So there's 2 x 2 x 2 x 25,000 times. Well that's 2 to the 25,000th. Right? Which is something like 10 to the 7,000th. Okay? There's only 10 to the 80th particles in the whole universe. Are you stunned?"

It's getting pretty staggering I told him. But there was more to come as he took me into his rugged landscapes theory – hopping out of one lake into a mountain pass and flowing down a creek into another lake and then wiggling the mountains and changing where the lakes are – all to demonstrate that the cell and the organism are a very complicated set of processes activating and inhibiting one another. "It's really much broader than genes," he said.

Kauffman presents some of this in his new book Reinventing the Sacred .

And natural selection is back in the equation.

In his book Investigations (2000), Kauffman wrote that "self-organization mingles with natural selection in barely understood ways to yield the magnificence of our teeming biosphere". He said he's still there, but now thinks natural selection exists throughout the universe.

Stuart Pivar, has been investigating self-organization in living forms but thinks natural selection is irrelevant – and has paid the price for this on the blogosphere. Pivar's an extremely engaging man, trained as a chemist and engineer – a bit of a wizard who loves old art. He was a long-time friend of Andy Warhol and a buddy of the late paleontologist Steve Gould, who continues to serve as an inspiration for Pivar's work.


Stuart Pivar

Steve Gould's Natural History magazine editor Richard Milner, by the way, describes Gould as "a popular articulator of Darwinian evolution to a new generation, while privately, his creative and rebellious mind sought to move beyond it."


Steve Gould

Milner , himself, is a Darwinian scholar and author of the Encyclopedia of Evolution and Darwin's Universe (forthcoming 2009). He says Gould was intrigued with theories of how natural selection may act on levels beyond the individual (social groups, species), or at different phases of the life cycle (evolution-development), and how other embryological and evolutionary phenomena (heterochrony, neoteny) may influence or impact evolution. And he notes that "Gould took issue with those who used natural selection carelessly as a mantra, as in the evidence-free "just-so stories" concocted out of thin air by mentally lazy adaptationists".

Gould also famously rejected the reductionism of Richard Dawkins' "selfish gene" theory, Milner says further, and was well aware that there seemed to be a disconnect between the models of genes, DNA, and the development of individual plants or animals.

Says Milner:

"Steve was one of the first evolutionary biologists, with Richard Lewontin, to publish the view that biology offered no plausible mechanism – a missing "theory of form," if you will – for how these genomic "blueprints" are followed in constructing phenotypes of living organisms."

I visited Stuart Pivar at his place just off New York's Central Park recently. It has the feel of a 19th century castle with interesting stuffed animals, rocks and other exotica, mixed in with important paintings and bronzes. Unlike most scientists I spoke with for this story, Pivar is not dependent on government grants to carry out his work.


Click for big version

Pivar says his theory is this. Body form is derived from the structure in the egg-cell membrane. And he handsomely illustrates in his book, The Engines of Evolution , how various species arise from the same basic structure, the Multi-torus, so-named by its discoverers -- mathematicians, biologists Jockusch and Dress in 2003.

Pivar told me this structure was confirmed recently by Eric Davidson's identification of the sea urchin embryo as a dynamic torus, resembling a slow-moving elongated smoke ring -- as in amoeboid motion.

If there's a lineage to his work, Pivar says it's rooted in Goethe, who observed that all life has a certain look to it – therefore it must be based on a form he called the "urform" – although Goethe never found the urform. Pivar's also been influenced by the 19th century scientist Wilhelm His, who made models using tubes of wax and pressed them to demonstrate how mechanical manipulation could generate the shape of the stomach, etc.

"The great D'Arcy Thompson was an inspiration as well," he said, citing Thompson's book On Growth and Form in which he described how every form in nature could be duplicated in the lab. Pivar said it's unfortunate Thompson never put the whole thing together to make a model, but that he has done just that.

He says he's shown that if you take a tubular form and you twist it this way or that way you can generate the shape of anything in nature. He notes this is equivalent to the organization of chemistry by the periodic table. This twisting action is how tigers get stripes, butterflies wing patterns, as well as how the human embryo forms.

In Engines, he has published what he describes as "the blueprints" – the construction blueprints for the human body, fruit fly, lobster, jellyfish -- the scheme by which all nature forms.

Stanley Salthe says he considers the theory of self-organization itself "up & coming" and thinks Pivar's idea is "reasonable".

Richard Lewontin, told me the following:

"I don't know what his [Pivar's] theory is but there's no question that the development of an egg is not dependent solely on the genes and nucleus, but on the structure of the egg as laid down to some extent. There are proteins that are there. There are non-genetic factors and I wouldn't be surprised if the actual structure of the cell membrane had some influence on the successive divisions that occur."

However, Lewontin added that "it's one thing to say some effect than it is to say I have a theory that it's allthere."

Pivar insists "It's all there."

Massimo Pigliucci does not consider Pivar's test with "wiggly water tubes" empirical evidence.

Pivar disagrees saying he presents a convincing model based on geometry and the animated drawings in his book but laments that he can't get serious science circles to review Engines. He attributes this reluctance to scientists being discouraged about taking a chance on ideas originating outside their peer group plus their dependence on government grants – which are tied-in to support for natural selection.

Pivar's also a keen observer of some of the conflicts of interest tainting science. He accuses the National Academy of Sciences of excluding other approaches to evolution but natural selection in their recent book Science, Education and Creationism.

Richard Lewontin resigned from NAS over the issue of one branch of NAS accepting government funds for secret weapons programs.

Pivar is also critical of church and state influences in science education, like the Astrobiology Primer funded by NASA, whose editor is a priest.

Fodor goes further, he says, "Astrobiology doesn't exist. What are the laws?"

Finally Pivar thinks non-profits advising schools on science education, like the National Center for Science Education, should not have religions represented on their board of directors. Pivar is obliquely referring to NCSE's board member from the. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints-funded Brigham Young University .

Curiously, when I called Kevin Padian, president of NCSE's board of directors and a witness at the 2005 Kitzmiller v. Dover trial on Intelligent Design, to ask him about the evolution debate among scientists – he said, "On some things there is not a debate." He then hung up.

Massimo Pigliucci finds it objectionable that "the study of forgiveness" is supported by the John Templeton Foundation, which funds the understanding of religion from a Christian view of God. Pigliucci says the rationale of scientists who take this money is that it's hard to get grants, that they have to put their children through school, etc. "Well, yes -- but there has to be a limit," he thinks.

As for educating the public about evolution, paleontologist Niles Edredge, a co-author with Steve Gould of the punctuated equilibrium theory – which Eldredge reminded me was based on one of his early papers – says that increasingly scientists are being encouraged to include public outreach when asking for government grants.


Niles Eldredge

Eldredge told me about the new journal that he and his son Gregory, a high school teacher in New York, are publishing through Springer called: Outreach and Education in Evolution. It debuts in March and will feature peer-reviewed articles about evolution.

I also spoke with evolutionary biologist Michael Lynch at his lab at Indiana University to get his perspective on the evolution debate.


Michael Lynch

Lynch is the author of the recent book The Origins of Genome Architecture. He says it's hard enough just to be a molecular biologist or a cell biologist and that reaching out to communicate to other fields is a "daunting task". He doesn't know why there's a push for an Extended Evolutionary Synthesis and says, "Everyone's bantering around these terms complexity, evolvability, robustness, and arguing that we need a new theory to explain these; I don't see it."

Lynch thinks the big challenge is to connect evolution at the genome level with cell development and the larger phenotypic level.

I asked Richard Lewontin whether it was premature to put together a new synthesis. He said he wouldn't use the world "premature" and added, "Why would we want to do that? To say it's premature suggests that one of these days we will have to. I don't know what we'll have to do in the future."

He continued:

"The so-called evolutionary synthesis – these are all very vague terms. . . . That's what I tried to say about Steve Gould is that scientists are always looking to find some theory or idea that they can push as something that nobody else ever thought of because that's the way they get their prestige. . . .they have an idea which will overturn our whole view of evolution because otherwise they're just workers in the factory, so to speak. And the factory was designed by Charles Darwin."

Clearly a new theory of evolution will impact all our lives. But how? Perhaps a global public broadcast of the "Altenberg 16" proceedings is the answer to that question.



My prediction?

Most will keep on riding the dead horse of Darwinian evolution even long after it skeletonizes and fossilizes .

10 comments:

James F. Elliott said...

Massimo Pigiliucci is a "ringer." He's one of the founders of the Secular Philosophy Blog and a popular atheist philosopher. His send-up of these guys is HILARIOUS.

OMG, 16 PROFESSORS AREN'T SATISFIED WITH EVOLUTION! You know, even the Maccabees got slaughtered.

Rob Singleton said...

Umm, not JUST 16 GUYS, James -- 16 or the very top thinkers you've got. Not all of them, grant it, but more than enough for a first string.

I mean, give me a break--a couple of these guys are the so-called "experts" Barefoot has thrown out there. Whether you want to face it or not, this would be analogous to me reading about the defection from the faith of, Billy Graham, Rick Warren, Bill Hybils, Norm Gisler, Mother Teresa (she gets a pass due to the fact that she’s in heaven now)—but you get the picture.

This is not at all a numbers thing. You yourself have walked away form Christianity (notice I said ‘Christianity’ not God – no one who truly knows God walks away. They just assume the religion they were entangled in was God. Actually, that’s about as far away from God as you can get. However, I may be thinking of someone else -- Is that your story? I’m getting my agnostics and atheists mixed up) but I do believe it’s safe to assume that you were never a leading apologist or central figure of Christianity so I daresay the impact would not truly be comparable.

Put it in perspective, James. In nearly every circle, and at many major universities, Darwinian evolution has been a theory on life support (no pun intended). It’s been a hopelessly lost cause for some time now. The bridge from nothing to sophisticated life never did support any weight, and now it’s beginning to come apart so bad it can’t even continue to be propped up for looks.

Rob Singleton said...

Predicted reaction:

James will mention several holdouts who still hold dearly to the Darwinian evolution from top to bottom.

Newsflash: Theories do come and go ( you might even be able to find a lost tribe of "flat earthers" out there if you look hard enough but he worls's still round.

James? You did not walk away from God years ago. You walked away from religion. An encounter with the living God changes you for life. I've met hundreds (maybe even thousands) who claim to have "tried Christianity," and walked away.

Sad, I would have told them not to bother. Jesus didn't come to bring religion. He came to earth to offer reconciliation.

And the offer still stands for even you. Though I can't say how long God's Spirit will continue to strive with you.

Jerry said...

Rob do you mind me asking you what is your background with the theory of evolution? Do you understand it?

Also, the bridge from nothing to life would be abiogenesis. The bridge from common ancestors to current forms of life represent the growing bush of evolution.

Furthermore, did you understand this article? Are you saying that the theory of evolution is... evolving? Then why would I read it and weep?

Science makes claims about the world and tests these claims. Even if evolution and abiogenesis in their current form are not correct, more sophisticated science would take its place. Just like the use of religion in society has evolved from its past forms to still remain relevant today.

Is your god not the god of the gaps? I mean no disrespect, but as a former christian I am on an everlasting journey to find at least one rational argument to investigate that does indeed favor the oddly irrational god of the old testament. Thanks

Rob Singleton said...

No, I do not mind at all. I have studied Darwinian evolutionary theory, micro, macro -- theological ID (gap theory, literal 6 days, etc...) for nearly 30 years.

But, when it comes to evolution, I am just a humble, pastor/part time philosopher.

Your reaction (comment) on (the contest blog -- the name of which now escapes me) just stood out to me. Obviously, as a pastor of a large church, I come in contact with those who believe they have encountered the living God and then walked away. But I have come to the belief that that is simply not possible. I'm just not coming from a position that the Potter owes the pot anything (let alone an explanation of his every move). The grace we receive is just that--grace (unmerited favor).

There's a curious yet common argument used by former Christians that seems to hold to a standard of fairness that is purely human--(i.e. "I stopped believing in God b/c I set up a certain list of parameters and He failed to act as I think He should").

IMHO God owes me nothing. And instead of looking at Him as an Ogre who "set us up" I see Him in truth as a loving God who knew that love without choice is no love at all but who still provided an incredibly easy was out for us while His Son took the hard road.

That's love.

I don't remember if you were the one who said the movie, ":The Passion of the Christ" was the last straw or not, but when I saw that movie my love for Jesus only intensified.

In the end, Jerry, as a former Christian surely you remember this truth found in Hebrews 13, "without faith it is impossible to please God..."

I believe and when I did, He met me there. When all is said and done, how can I explain that to guys like The Barefoot Bum"? The Bible also makes it clear that spiritual things are foolish to those who are perishing." So I often feel like the guy who met a man in the dessert who gave me water, food, wisdom for life, love and everything I needed to get back on my feet. The encounter changed me forever, but what do you tell the ranger who goes to the spot a few weeks later and can't even find footprints?

Do you turn your back on God? NO, He's my best friend. I will do my best to convince the Ranger, but in the end faith enters the picture for everyone.

Or not.

Rob Singleton said...

I also know that these 16 superstars of agnosticism are not giving up on evolution -- they are merely trying to reinvent it because they hit yet another pothole.

In the end you will call it science and a mere bump in the road. I will call it a blackhole.

Jerry said...

Thanks for the response.

I am certainly not here to attack your faith. I can respectfully agree to disagree.

I am not sure if you are referring to me in respect to the contest comment. Comfort food response perhaps? Also, I have not seen nor commented on the passion.

I am interested on your thoughts of the six literal days of creation. Are you in line with Kent Hovind on this issue, or do you at least accept certain claims of cosmology regarding the age of the universe as well as the earth? The latter being that 'indians hunted large lizards called dragons which we know as dinosuars' as Hovind puts it.

James F. Elliott said...

Well, your prediction is quite wrong, because I don't particularly care to debate the scientifcally illiterate time and again. There is a plethora of information out there for you to imbibe and evaluate, if you are capable of doing so without prejudice.

But I would point out that, like Professor Pigilucci, not all of these participants are participating on the side you support. Some are, to be sure. But it's also important to point out that evolution has -- pardon the pun -- evolved as a theory over the years; science isn't a scriptually immutable practice with inerrant "holy texts." You're arguning a stupid straw man.

In nearly every circle, and at many major universities, Darwinian evolution has been a theory on life support (no pun intended).

Do tell. I must say though, you seem to be conflating abiogenesis with evolution; the former is an area of great debate, while the latter is as rock-solid as gravity. Please, read a book.

James? You did not walk away from God years ago. You walked away from religion.

In order to walk away from a religion, I must have been "entangled" in one to begin with. The only religious services I have been to are weddings and bar/bat mitzvahs. I have never worshipped or, until marrying, been a part of a family that did.

I have never had a use for religion, nor for god. I hold no beef with a belief or knowledge of god; I do not know or believe in it, lacking any such revelatory experience, but I am open to the possibility.

And you are quite right that I have no use for religion. Were I to firmly believe in god, I would still have no need for it. Belief does not entail worship.

Though I can't say how long God's Spirit will continue to strive with you.

Please. Metaphysical threats?

Garret G said...

Hi rob,
glad I found your blog here, will stop by often...great article!
God bless you brother!
Garret

Rob Singleton said...

I probably should have posted a recent comment from, 'Peter,' but, quite honestly, it was so childish and uniformed I hardly new which end of his post to start in on first.

It's best for his sake not to post it. Believe me.

But I will answer some of the obvious as I remember them.

First, "why was Jesus Sacrifice and and the fact that God "sent His Son" such a a big deal? Lots of people sacrifice themselves for others. If I knew I could save the whole world by sacrificing my own life, I would do it."

1. You're not qualified, Peter. You are a sinner (so am I, so don't feel picked on. We all are. But alas, sinless perfection is the requirement. Application rejected).

2. You're not God. So whether or not God rose again is not the point. The point is that almighty God condescended to us. He did not have to, but b/c of love, He did.