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The Facts of Life: Shattering the Myths of Darwinism. A Review.
New Statesman ^ | 28 August 1992 | Richard Dawkins

Posted on 07/03/2002 9:53:47 AM PDT by Tomalak

Every day I get letters, in capitals and obsessively underlined if not actually in green ink, from flat-earthers, young-earthers, perpetual-motion merchants, astrologers and other harmless fruitcakes. The only difference here is that Richard Milton managed to get his stuff published. The publisher - we don’t know how many decent publishers turned it down first - is called ‘Fourth Estate.’ Not a house that I had heard of, but apparently neither a vanity press nor a fundamentalist front. So, what are ‘Fourth Estate’ playing at? Would they publish - for this book is approximately as silly - a claim that the Romans never existed and the Latin language is a cunning Victorian fabrication to keep schoolmasters employed?

A cynic might note that there is a paying public out there, hungry for simple religious certitude, who will lap up anything with a subtitle like ‘Shattering the Myth of Darwinism.’ If the author pretends not to be religious himself, so much the better, for he can then be exhibited as an unbiased witness. There is - no doubt about it - a fast buck to be made by any publishers unscrupulous enough to print pseudoscience that they know is rubbish but for which there is a market.

But let’s not be so cynical. Mightn’t the publishers have an honourable defence? Perhaps this unqualified hack is a solitary genius, the only soldier in the entire platoon - nay, regiment - who is in step. Perhaps the world really did bounce into existence in 8000 BC. Perhaps the whole vast edifice of orthodox science really is totally and utterly off its trolley. (In the present case, it would have to be not just orthodox biology but physics, geology and cosmology too). How do we poor publishers know until we have printed the book and seen it panned?

If you find that plea persuasive, think again. It could be used to justify publishing literally anything; flat-earth, fairies, astrology, werewolves and all. It is true that an occasional lonely figure, originally written off as loony or at least wrong, has eventually been triumphantly vindicated (though not often a journalist like Richard Milton, it has to be said). But it is also true that a much larger number of people originally regarded as wrong really were wrong. To be worth publishing, a book must do a little more than just be out of step with the rest of the world.

But, the wretched publisher might plead, how are we, in our ignorance, to decide? Well, the first thing you might do - it might even pay you, given the current runaway success of some science books - is employ an editor with a smattering of scientific education. It needn’t be much: A-level Biology would have been ample to see off Richard Milton. At a more serious level, there are lots of smart young science graduates who would love a career in publishing (and their jacket blurbs would avoid egregious howlers like calling Darwinism the "idea that chance is the mechanism of evolution.") As a last resort you could even do what proper publishers do and send the stuff out to referees. After all, if you were offered a manuscript claiming that Tennyson wrote The Iliad, wouldn’t you consult somebody, say with an O-level in History, before rushing into print?

You might also glance for a second at the credentials of the author. If he is an unknown journalist, innocent of qualifications to write his book, you don’t have to reject it out of hand but you might be more than usually anxious to show it to referees who do have some credentials. Acceptance need not, of course, depend on the referees’ endorsing the author’s thesis: a serious dissenting opinion can deserve to be heard. But referees will save you the embarrassment of putting your imprint on twaddle that betrays, on almost every page, complete and total pig-ignorance of the subject at hand.

All qualified physicists, biologists, cosmologists and geologists agree, on the basis of massive, mutually corroborating evidence, that the earth’s age is at least four billion years. Richard Milton thinks it is only a few thousand years old, on the authority of various Creation ‘science’ sources including the notorious Henry Morris (Milton himself claims not to be religious, and he affects not to recognise the company he is keeping). The great Francis Crick (himself not averse to rocking boats) recently remarked that "anyone who believes that the earth is less than 10,000 years old needs psychiatric help." Yes yes, maybe Crick and the rest of us are all wrong and Milton, an untrained amateur with a ‘background’ as an engineer, will one day have the last laugh. Want a bet?

Milton misunderstands the first thing about natural selection. He thinks the phrase refers to selection among species. In fact, modern Darwinians agree with Darwin himself that natural selection chooses among individuals within species. Such a fundamental misunderstanding would be bound to have far-reaching consequences; and they duly make nonsense of several sections of the book.

In genetics, the word ‘recessive’ has a precise meaning, known to every school biologist. It means a gene whose effect is masked by another (dominant) gene at the same locus. Now it also happens that large stretches of chromosomes are inert - untranslated. This kind of inertness has not the smallest connection with the ‘recessive’ kind. Yet Milton manages the feat of confusing the two. Any slightly qualified referee would have picked up this clanger.

There are other errors from which any reader capable of thought would have saved this book. Stating correctly that Immanuel Velikovsky was ridiculed in his own time, Milton goes on to say "Today, only forty years later, a concept closely similar to Velikovsky’s is widely accepted by many geologists - that the major extinction at the end of the Cretaceous ... was caused by collison with a giant meteor or even asteroid." But the whole point of Velikovsky (indeed, the whole reason why Milton, with his eccentric views on the age of the earth, champions him) is that his collision was supposed to have happened recently; recently enough to explain Biblical catastrophes like Moses’s parting of the Red Sea. The geologists’ meteorite, on the other hand, is supposed to have impacted 65 million years ago! There is a difference - approximately 65 million years difference. If Velikovsky had placed his collision tens of millions of years ago he would not have been ridiculed. To represent him as a misjudged, wilderness-figure who has finally come into his own is either disingenuous or - more charitably and plausibly - stupid.

In these post-Leakey, post-Johanson days, creationist preachers are having to learn that there is no mileage in ‘missing links.’ Far from being missing, the fossil links between modern humans and our ape ancestors now constitute an elegantly continuous series. Richard Milton, however, still hasn’t got the message. For him, "...the only ‘missing link’ so far discovered remains the bogus Piltdown Man." Australopithecus, correctly described as a human body with an ape’s head, doesn’t qualify because it is ‘really’ an ape. And Homo habilis - ‘handy man’ - which has a brain "perhaps only half the size of the average modern human’s" is ruled out from the other side: "... the fact remains that handy man is a human - not a missing link." One is left wondering what a fossil has to do - what more could a fossil do - to qualify as a ‘missing link’?

No matter how continuous a fossil series may be, the conventions of zoological nomenclature will always impose discontinuous names. At present, there are only two generic names to spread over all the hominids. The more ape-like ones are shoved into the genus Australopithecus; the more human ones into the genus Homo. Intermediates are saddled with one name or the other. This would still be true if the series were as smoothly continuous as you can possibly imagine. So, when Milton says, of Johanson’s ‘Lucy’ and associated fossils, "the finds have been referred to either Australopithecus and hence are apes, or Homo and hence are human," he is saying something (rather dull) about naming conventions, nothing at all about the real world.

But this is a more sophisticated criticism than Milton’s book deserves. The only serious question raised by its publication is why. As for would-be purchasers, if you want this sort of silly-season drivel you’d be better off with a couple of Jehovah’s Witness tracts. They are more amusing to read, they have rather sweet pictures, and they put their religious cards on the table.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: bigotry; charlesdarwin; creationism; crevolist; darwin; darwinism; dawkins; evolution; intelligentdesign; milton; richarddawkins; richardmilton
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This guy can write!
1 posted on 07/03/2002 9:53:48 AM PDT by Tomalak
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To: Tomalak
I believe God created the heavens and the earth as well as all that is upon it. He even gave it the appearence of great age. In fact he created it with great age so it would be appropriate for sustaining the kinds of life he put upon it.
2 posted on 07/03/2002 10:00:54 AM PDT by Khepera
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To: Tomalak
Write what? Trash? Constant ridicule and insult? This writer would make a nice liberal.
3 posted on 07/03/2002 10:11:17 AM PDT by RaceBannon
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To: Tomalak
I hate to break it to you- all but the most foam-at the mouth, fire breathing, anti-religious nut jobs think Rick Dawkins is a mental case.

He's been quoted as saying (among other absurdities) that people who question Darwinism are "either insane, stupid or both (or perhaps wicked but I'd rather not consider that)".

For a real treat, check out ID'er Phil Johnson's critiques of Dawkins. Some can defend Darwinism quite well. Dawkins is not one of them.

Another one of his big gafaws is that he tries to use Darwinism to prop up his atheism. A greater betrayal to objective science I cannot think of.

For further fun, read his debates with prominent neo-Darwinist Stephen Jay Gould. They were mortal enemies because Gould dared to question traditional Darwinian orthodoxy and once even lamented that "darwinism is on its way out".
4 posted on 07/03/2002 10:14:58 AM PDT by That Subliminal Kid
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To: RaceBannon
To the contrary, Dawkins makes several substantive comments on the work.
5 posted on 07/03/2002 10:16:44 AM PDT by spqrzilla9
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To: Khepera
"i believe" -- faith, not science... nothing wrong with that but it needs to be discussed separately.

i believe that it is pointless to debate "evolution", age of the earth, etc. there is no "scientific" method of "proving" anyone's theory on the matter. and the important question of where did the first piece of life, in the form of bacteria (?), come from is never addressed. because it is too difficult to scientifically consider. and then, even if advances over the next 10, 100, 1000 years allow the addressing of that very important question you still have to ask where the atom in its intricate detail "came from".

we live in the confinement of time - birth to death - and have no ability to answer questions outside of that realm, although the questions come in abundance.
6 posted on 07/03/2002 10:17:21 AM PDT by kpp_kpp
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To: Tomalak
Anyone for a Creation/Evolution moratorium in FR? Speaking for myself, I find following the convolutions in creationist thought very tiring.
7 posted on 07/03/2002 10:19:56 AM PDT by ko_kyi
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To: kpp_kpp
The question of how life started - aka "abiogenesis" - is separate from evolution. Evolution proper does not make claims on how life started, only how life has behaved since.
8 posted on 07/03/2002 10:21:11 AM PDT by spqrzilla9
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To: kpp_kpp
I have no care to discuss "Science". There is no real way to change someones mind via argument. I believe what I say is true because God told me the truth. I will act on that and ignore any heathens who wish to argue foe what do they know but the smell of their own flatulance.
9 posted on 07/03/2002 10:22:59 AM PDT by Khepera
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To: ko_kyi
I find narrow minded people who think a complex subject like evolution has only two sides to it are tiring. I vote for a moratorium on stupidity. You with me?
10 posted on 07/03/2002 10:23:32 AM PDT by That Subliminal Kid
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To: Tomalak
This guy can write!

(from article) Want a bet?

Um, that would be "wanna bet?" as in "want to bet?" That's about as annoying as writing your instead of you're.

And yes, he can write. It's the condescension and smug arrogance behind the words I take issue with. Bullsh*t, however eloquently stated, is still bullsh*t.

11 posted on 07/03/2002 10:28:03 AM PDT by Frumanchu
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To: Khepera
I believe God created the heavens and the earth as well as all that is upon it. He even gave it the appearence of great age.

Ain’t America grand, a place where people are free to believe whatever they choose, right? Unfortunately, if taught in schools the net result would leave the next generation at the mercy of those countries that build their science on a foundation of truth.

Science mixed with religion rarely produces bad religion or good science. Take islam for instance, a complete religion that dictates everything about everything, when applied to science, it leaves its practitioners at the mercy of their enemies smart bombs, while praying to its god for deliverance form evil infidels. That what happens when science is tainted by religion.

12 posted on 07/03/2002 10:28:44 AM PDT by TightSqueeze
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To: spqrzilla9
The question of how life started - aka "abiogenesis" - is separate from evolution

thank you. exactly my point. that is why i see the creationist/evolutionist debates as pointless. you could go around in circle for eternity (ah the elusive concept of time again) debating theories, especially unrelated ones.

13 posted on 07/03/2002 10:28:50 AM PDT by kpp_kpp
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To: TightSqueeze
We do not need science to live and die. We do that in spite of science.
14 posted on 07/03/2002 10:30:39 AM PDT by Khepera
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To: Frumanchu
"Want a bet?" is short for "Do you want a bet?" not "Want to bet?".

And whoever added "bigotry" to the keywords list needs help.
15 posted on 07/03/2002 10:31:03 AM PDT by Tomalak
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To: Tomalak
What ever happens, I hope I'm stoned at the time.
16 posted on 07/03/2002 10:31:56 AM PDT by DinkyDau
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To: Tomalak
If being enlightened means I have to cast my lot with a nasty, snotty, cynical, know-it-all, ad hominem attack artist par excellence like Dawkins, I'd rather stay benighted.
17 posted on 07/03/2002 10:32:53 AM PDT by beckett
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To: Tomalak
Having actually read this book, I must say that this review is a bit lacking. He harps on two points and ignores the rest of the concepts argued.

Even if you don't agree with the guy (there are points, such as the age of the Earth that are very questionsable) it would be nice if this reviewer had actually proved that he'd read it...which I get the feeling he didn't.

And one other thing that gets on my nerves: you don't need a Phd to comment ably on any number of heady scientific concepts. It's simpy the ivory tower dwellers protecting their turf agains the imposition of the serfs.
18 posted on 07/03/2002 10:34:35 AM PDT by ECM
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To: Tomalak
The implication was that "want to bet?" was short for "Do you want to bet?" which makes more sense than "Do you want a bet?"

Anyone else want to weigh in? Anything to avoid the CvE debate... :D

19 posted on 07/03/2002 10:34:37 AM PDT by Frumanchu
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To: Khepera
I believe what I say is true because God told me the truth

When? Have a recording? How do you know it was God?

20 posted on 07/03/2002 10:35:07 AM PDT by John H K
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