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Bible Q & A
The Extinction of Darwinism
Review of Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad Luck
by David M. Raup, (Norton 1991)
Phillip E. Johnson
This review was first published in The Atlantic, February, 1992.
David Raup's new [1991] book Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad
Luck? is something more than the usual scientific journalism.
Raup, a senior paleontologist at the University of Chicago, is
a leading figure among the scientists who have made "catastrophe"
a respectable concept once again in the scientific study of the
earth's history. His book is a very readable but state-of-the-art
account of what scientists know about why dinosaurs and all those
other fossil species aren't with us any more. By concluding that
species become extinct because of bad luck rather than because
they are unfit, Raup inadvertently raises some awkward questions
about how those species got there in the first place.
Scientific thinking about extinctions has strayed far from
the Darwinian principles that still define orthodoxy in the life
sciences as a whole. According to Raup, the Darwinian theory that
extinctions result from the slow and steady effects of biological
competition is "appealing, and has been learned by generations
of biology students." Nonetheless, "its verification
from actual field data is negligible." Raup goes on to say,
without really arguing the point, that abandonment of the Darwinian
explanation of extinctions does not discredit Darwin's theory
that today's species evolved from earlier species through natural
selection. To explain what lies behind that disclaimer -- and
why it can't be accepted at face value -- I need to explain something
about the place of extinctions in Darwinian theory.
Darwinian evolution is best known as a theory about the origin
of species, but it is equally a theory about how species become
extinct. The most influential interpreter of fossil history before
the triumph of Darwinism was the great French sage Cuvier, forgotten
in the English-speaking world today but in his time renowned as
the "Aristotle of Biology." Cuvier reported that there
had apparently been profound catastrophes in the earth's history.
Entire groups of ancient creatures disappeared abruptly from the
rocks, and were replaced just as abruptly by new groups which
repopulated the earth.
Catastrophic extinctions and sudden creations are outside the
normal range of human experience, and hence may be elusive to
scientific investigation. It would be much more convenient for
science if the important changes in the earth's history resulted
gradually, from the uniform operation over immense time periods
of natural forces which we can observe in operation today. The
motto of uniformitarian science is that "the present is the
key to the past." It is a triumphant motto because, with
such a key in its possession, science can in principle unlock
all the secrets of nature. Scientists thus had a strong professional
motivation to reinterpret the geological evidence according to
rules that disallowed both catastrophes and sudden creations as
scientific explanations.
The lawyer/geologist Charles Lyell established a rigorous uniformitarianism
as the basis of geology, and Darwin extended Lyell's logic to
biology. Species did not either appear or disappear suddenly,
according to Darwin's classic The Origin of Species. Rather,
they evolved step by tiny step from earlier forms, due to the
accumulation of tiny favorable variations through natural selection.
Species declined to extinction equally gradually, as they were
supplanted by modified descendants or by competing species that
were more proficient at surviving and reproducing. If Darwin was
right, both the origin and the extinction of living forms occurred
through the slow and steady action of forces -- reproduction,
inheritance, and competition -- which we see operating in everyday
life.
It is important to understand that creation by natural selection
and extinction by natural selection are not two separate processes,
but two aspects of the same process. In Darwinian terms, superior
fitness means superior capacity at leaving descendants.
If evolution has furthered the development of capabilities like
strength, or vision, or intelligence, it is only because organisms
possessing these (inheritable) qualities consistently left more
descendants than competing organisms which lacked them. The more
fit crowd out the less fit by definition, and there is no such
thing as natural selection unless they do. In Darwin's words,
"The theory of natural selection is grounded on the belief
that each new variety, and ultimately each new species, is produced
and maintained by having some advantage over those with whom it
comes into competition; and the consequent extinction of less
favored forms almost inevitably follows."
Darwin cited this logical relationship between evolution and
extinction to refute one of the most formidable objections to
his theory. "Evolution" implies a continuous process
of change, but nature is organized in discrete groups which seem
isolated from each other. How could (say) an insect become a vertebrate
except by a miraculous transformation? Where were the intermediate
links that ought to exist if continuous change had occurred? The
answer, Darwin explained, was that
"As natural selection acts solely by the preservation
of profitable modifications, each new form will tend in a fully
stocked country to take the place of, and finally to exterminate,
its own less improved parent or other less favored forms with
which it comes into competition. Thus extinction and natural
selection will, as we have seen, go hand in hand. Hence, if we
look at each species as descended from some other unknown form,
both the parent and all the transitional varieties will have
been exterminated by the very process of formation and perfection
of the new form."
If extinction and natural selection did not go hand in hand,
some of the parent forms ought to have survived to the present.
It is therefore an essential element of Darwinism that species
continually became extinct because they were less fit than
their descendants or other rivals. And because superior fitness
itself emerges very gradually, extinction of a competing species
should also proceed gradually. What is true of individual species
should be still more true of groups of species -- families,
orders, classes, and so on.
Because of this logic Darwin insisted that Cuvier's theory
of periodic catastrophes had been thoroughly discredited, and
that, on the contrary, "there is reason to believe that the
complete extinction of the species of a group is generally a slower
process than their production." That judgment was based entirely
on theoretical grounds, rather than on fossil evidence. In fact,
the only evidence Darwin cited in the relevant passage was the
extermination of the ammonites (ancient mollusks) at the end of
the Cretaceous, which he acknowledged to have been "wonderfully
sudden." According to Darwin, the struggle for existence
is so finely tuned that "the merest trifle would often give
the victory of one organic being over another. Nevertheless so
profound is our ignorance, and so high our presumption, that we
marvel when we hear of the extinction of an organic being: and
as we do not see the cause we invoke cataclysms to desolate the
world...." In short, Darwinian ideology maintained that earlier
geologists had attributed extinctions to catastrophes not because
that was a reasonable interpretation of the fossil evidence, but
because they were ignorant of the higher law of natural selection.
If one wanted to subject Darwin's theory to empirical testing,
one way to do it would be to examine the history of extinctions.
Does the evidence confirm that biological competition was frequently
the cause of extinctions? Can the occurrence of a Darwinian extinction
-- by competition from a closely related rival -- be confirmed
in even a single case? To put the point the other way around:
Have the paleontologists, despite their best efforts to see fossil
history in a Darwinian light, found that Cuvier was much closer
to the truth after all? The answers couldn't be clearer.
The story starts with the famous "K-T" (Cretaceous-Tertiary)
extinction of 66 million years ago. The K-T is not the biggest
of the "Big 5" mass extinctions which mark the close
of various geological ages, but it is the most recent and the
most fascinating from an anthropocentric point of view. It eliminated
the dinosaurs, the ammonites, and a lot else, clearing the way
for mammals to dominate the planet.
Geologist Walter Alvarez (with his famous physicist father
Luis Alvarez and others) startled the world in 1979 by attributing
the mass extinction to a meteor or comet impact, which caused
a worldwide environmental disaster that disrupted the food chain.
As Raup puts it, the first reaction of paleontologists schooled
in Lyellian and Darwinian concepts was horror and disbelief: "It
was like suggesting that the dinosaurs had been shot by little
green men from a spaceship." Hardly more than a decade later,
so much confirming evidence has piled up that Raup predicts that
soon "it will be difficult to find anyone who ever doubted
the impact-extinction link." In science as in war, victory
has a thousand fathers; defeat is an orphan.
Was the K-T extinction (or the Big 5 as a group) an exception
to a generally Darwinian pattern of gradual extinctions by competition?
Raup thinks that environmental disasters triggered by large meteor
impacts may have caused most extinctions (other than those caused
by humans). There is some evidence of a connection between major
extinctions and known meteor impacts, but Raup concedes that the
evidence is far from conclusive. What inclines him to the meteor
theory is primarily the difficulty of attributing extinctions
to more mundane causes.
It turns out to be very difficult to kill off a numerous and
wide-ranging species unless a catastrophic "first strike"
has severely depleted its numbers and restricted its range. Even
the spectacular environmental stress induced by the last great
Ice Age produced only a relatively modest number of extinctions,
although the casualties included such popular favorites as the
mammoths and sabre-tooth tigers. It seems that something far outside
the ordinary run of environmental hazards is needed to kill enough
individuals to threaten a widely distributed species with extinction,
and meteor impacts may be the least unlikely of the known alternatives.
Maybe most extinctions were triggered by giant meteor impacts
and maybe they weren't. If it is difficult to determine what did
cause the bulk of extinctions, it is much easier to determine
what didn't. There is no hard evidence that any observable extinctions
were caused by competition from closely related species. Raup
notes that evolutionary biologists long emphasized competition
as a cause of extinctions because the explanation "seemed
self-evident," but when they actually tried to test the effect
of competition the results were negative. The only reason for
attributing extinctions to Darwinian competition remains the theory
itself.
Some groups survived mass extinctions while others did not,
but this does not mean that the survivors were more fit in any
Darwinian sense. Characteristics that would aid survival under
normal circumstances would not necessarily be of any use under
the extreme conditions of a catastrophe. For example, there is
nothing to identify mammals as more fit than dinosaurs other than
that some mammals happened to survive the K-T extinction. When
a prominent Darwinist attributed the survival of some groups in
a mass extinction to their possession of the quality of "resistance
to extinction," his statement added nothing to the bare fact
that they had survived.
But then what becomes of Darwinism? Raup answers that attributing
extinctions to bad luck rather than bad genes does not discredit
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, because
Natural selection remains the only viable, naturalistic explanation
we have for sophisticated adaptations like wings and eyes. We
would not be here without natural selection. Extinction by bad
luck merely adds another element to the evolutionary process,
operating at the level [of] species, families, and classes, rather
than the level of local breeding populations of single species.
The trouble with that disclaimer is that in Darwin's theory
survival of the fittest and extinction of the less fit are the
same thing, not two separable processes. Does natural selection
produce variation only within the local breeding populations
of single species? Then it doesn't produce new species -- much
less new families and classes, or innovations like wings and eyes.
Does natural selection continue to produce its creative effects
beyond the species boundary? Then it does so by selecting
the less fit species for increasing rarity and eventual extinction,
just as Darwin said. A natural selection that only creates and
never destroys is a logical impossibility, because it wouldn't
be doing any selecting.
There is a way out of this logical impasse, but it is one I
think Raup or any other empirical scientist would be reluctant
to take. Only a minority of species are fossilized and hence only
a minority of extinctions are recorded. Approximately 250,000
fossil species have been cataloged. According to Raup's figures
(based on estimates of average species longevity and standing
diversity over the age of the earth), between 5 and 50 billion
species may have lived during earth's long history, of which at
most 40 million or so exist today. Who can say what may have extinguished
the billions of species which apparently lived and vanished without
leaving a trace?
Perhaps only the visible extinctions went according to Cuvier,
and the invisible ones were Darwinian. Withdrawing a subject from
empirical investigation in order to protect a theory from falsification
is hardly the scientific thing to do, however. Raup says that
the study of extinctions was long neglected: perhaps the influence
of Darwinism kept it off limits.
Copyright © 1996 Phillip E. Johnson. All
rights reserved. International copyright secured.
File Date: 9.11.96
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