Tag Archives: theory of evolution

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The Tornado in the Junkyard – Aish HaTorah Employees Should Read This

This is all from Ebonmusing. It is a addressed to Creationists but essentially Aish HaTorah and Chabad, Kiruv.com and all the other outreach manufacturing plants practice a form of sophisticated Creationist voodoo.

In his 1983 book The Intelligent Universe, astronomer Fred Hoyle wrote the following infamous passage:

“A junkyard contains all the bits and pieces of a Boeing 747, dismembered and in disarray. A whirlwind happens to blow through the yard. What is the chance that after its passage a fully assembled 747, ready to fly, will be found standing there? So small as to be negligible, even if a tornado were to blow through enough junkyards to fill the whole Universe.” (p.19)

Though Hoyle actually intended this as an argument against abiogenesis, the creationists have since assimilated it and used it against evolution. In creationist literature, this argument has mutated into a diversity of forms: setting off an explosion in a print shop to produce a dictionary, disassembling a watch and shaking up the pieces in a box to reassemble it, and so on, building a bicycle by applying a blowtorch to a pile of bicycle parts, and so on. No matter what form the analogy takes, however, creationists have promoted it as a common-sense proof of the impossibility of evolution producing complex, highly ordered forms. There is even a creationist book titled Tornado in a Junkyard.

This essay will show that this analogy is not an accurate representation of how evolution (or, for that matter, abiogenesis) works. In fact, it is a straw man, a ridiculous caricature that bears no resemblance to what the theory actually says. However, it is first helpful to establish a few things about the credentials of its author. Fred Hoyle was an astronomer, and whatever the validity of his professional opinions on astronomy, he was not trained in biology, paleontology, genetics, or any other field having to do with evolution. He was no more qualified to make pronouncements about evolution than any layman, and indeed his comments demonstrate a profound misunderstanding of the theory. Nevertheless, whatever he was, he was certainly not a creationist.

“The creationist is a sham religious person who, curiously, has no true sense of religion. In the language of religion, it is the facts we observe in the world around us that must be seen to constitute the words of God. Documents, whether the Bible, Qur’an or those writings that held such force for Velikovsky, are only the words of men. To prefer the words of men to those of God is what one can mean by blasphemy. This, we think, is the instinctive point of view of most scientists who, curiously again, have a deeper understanding of the real nature of religion than have the many who delude themselves into a frenzied belief in the words, often the meaningless words, of men. Indeed, the lesser the meaning, the greater the frenzy, in something like inverse proportion.”
–Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe, Our Place in the Cosmos (1993), p.14

“We are inescapably the result of a long heritage of learning, adaptation, mutation and evolution, the product of a history which predates our birth as a biological species and stretches back over many thousand millennia…. Going further back, we share a common ancestry with our fellow primates; and going still further back, we share a common ancestry with all other living creatures and plants down to the simplest microbe. The further back we go, the greater the difference from external appearances and behavior patterns which we observe today…. Darwin’s theory, which is now accepted without dissent, is the cornerstone of modern biology. Our own links with the simplest forms of microbial life are well-nigh proven.”
–Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe, Lifecloud: The Origin of Life in the Universe (1978), p.15-16

We turn now to the tornado in the junkyard. This analogy says nothing about the validity of evolution, or for that matter abiogenesis, because it fails to represent them in four crucial ways.

1. It operates purely according to random chance.
2. It is an example of single-step, rather than cumulative, selection.
3. It is a saltationary jump – an end product entirely unlike the beginning product.
4. It has a target specified ahead of time.

The first point is the most important. The tornado in the junkyard is an example of an intricate, complex and highly organized form being produced by nothing more than random chance. But evolution is not chance. (See this article for more on this.) Rather, it operates according to a fixed law – the law of natural selection – which favors some assemblages over others; it preferentially selects for those adaptations which improve fitness and selects against those that do not. The tornado, by contrast, slams parts together and tears them apart with no preference whatsoever, thus completely failing to represent natural selection, the central force which drives evolution. To more accurately represent evolution, one would have to grant the tornado some power to recognize assemblages of parts which could serve as part of a 747 and prevent it from tearing them apart.

Second, the tornado analogy is an example of single-step selection – in one step, it goes from a random pile of parts to a fully assembled airliner. This is completely unlike evolution, which operates according to a process of cumulative selection – complex results that are built up gradually, in a repetitive process guided at each step by selective forces. To more accurately represent evolution, the tornado could be sent through the junkyard not once, but thousands or millions of times, at each step preserving chance assemblages of parts that could make up a jumbo jet.

Third, in relation to the point above, the tornado in the junkyard is an example of saltation – a sudden leap in which the end product is completely different from the beginning product. Evolution does not work this way; birds do not hatch out of dinosaur eggs and monkeys do not give birth to humans. Rather, species grow different over time through a process of slow change in which each new creature is only slightly different from its ancestor. Evolution forms a gradually shading continuum in which any two steps are almost identical, though the creatures at the beginning and end of the continuum may be very different indeed. If we sent a tornado through a junkyard once, we would not expect to see a complete airplane; but if we repeated the process thousands or millions of times, at each step preserving useful assemblages, we might see a jumbo jet gradually taking shape out of slowly accreting collections of parts. The idea is the same with living things. We do not see complex new creatures appearing suddenly in the fossil record; rather, we see them gradually forming by a process of modification from a line of increasingly dissimilar ancestors.

Finally, the tornado analogy fails to represent evolution in one more significant way: it has a target specified ahead of time. Evolution does not. Natural selection is not a forward-looking process; it cannot select for what may become useful in the future, only what is immediately useful in the present. To more accurately represent evolution, we might add the additional stipulation that the tornado be allowed to assemble, not just a jumbo jet, but any functional piece of machinery.

A tornado racing through a junkyard hundreds of thousands of times, at each step somehow preserving rather than tearing apart functional assemblages of parts, with the aim of ultimately producing some sort of working machine, be it a 747, a station wagon or a personal computer – this is still not a very good analogy to describe evolution, but it is far better than the implausible caricature of random, single-step saltation with a predetermined target the creationists put forth. This analogy completely fails to represent evolution in every significant way.

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Argument from design Beauty Design Argument Religion Suffering

Design Argument, Thomas Aquinas, Beauty and the evidence of suffering

Thomas Aquinas had five ways of proving God. His fifth proof was to point to things such as the regular and perfect rotation of the planets. Aquinas said that this regularity can only have come about through the desire or will of an intelligent being otherwise the fact that things obey uniform laws would merely be the result of chance. His initial argument was founded on an ignorance of science and the notion that the path and motion of the planets must be ‘God’s will’ each and every single time rather than the result of natural laws. However it must be admitted then that there still remains a more profound question as to why these laws exist at all. The regularity we observe in the universe around us (and, indeed, within us) can still be taken as evidence for God if we wish to look at it that way.

There is so much beauty in the universe! Can this not be taken as evidence of God’s handiwork? Beauty, in itself, has no survival value and where does the theory of evolution fit in with that? The fact that we can perceive beauty in all sorts of things in the universe, from human art to natural form, could suggest a designer God. This is one way in which a conclusion could be reached in which we see the universe as a fundamentally good creation of God, with a clear purpose and God’s fingerprints everywhere and in everything.

Yes we do perceive, or are programmed to perceive, beauty, but is the universe, as a whole, really like this when you look at it with all honesty? One way to critique the Design Argument would be to find ways to contradict it. If you’re basing an argument on evidence, you can’t then simply ignore anything that doesn’t fit ­into your argument. It would be natural to bring up the fact that there are a multitude of evil acts taking place in the world and there certainly is tremendous suffering. Of course the evil and the suffering in the world are referred to as unhappy byproducts of God’s gift to humankind of “free will”. In order to have free will God had to open the gateway to potential evil and the theist can still consider that God maintains the necessary qualities of benevolence, omnipotence and omniscience. Now although the “problem of evil” is a whole other topic, it is natural to rear its head in a discussion of the argument from design. My issues in brief would be as follows. God, by normative definition, can do anything. He can create any space, any form and any set of conditions or circumstances that animate and motivate these forms. God can do what is inconceivable to us. So if we want God to be benevolent, shouldn’t we be asking whether the Supreme Being couldn’t have managed to supply us with free will without the attendant suffering? Of course he could have, answers the theist, but he didn’t and it is not our place to question why God did it a certain way rather than another. And that is when the theist conveniently discards the need for evidence. The believer who until a certain point attempts to prove their point through logic and evidence suddenly tosses it all and becomes a – well, a mere believer, without even any pretension remaining to base anything on “science” or what Aish.com refers to as evidence in a court.

It is always interesting to watch the shuffle occur when the rationalistic approach doesn’t plug the hole anymore. It is that way just because it is that way and that is the theistic argument when it shipwrecks. The lifeboats come out and the lifejackets go on and God just continues to work in mysterious ways. Logic be damned. (Hey by the way. Remember in a previous post I said I was not an atheist? Well I still refuse to be labeled that way because everything depends on what your definition of God is. I don’t agree with the normative definition and I rarely use the word God seriously but I am no agent of Richard Dawkins. Oh well, you will label me anyway won’t you?)

Of course not all suffering comes at the hands of selfish men and women. Much of it comes from nature itself. hurricanes, earthquakes, famine caused by drought and other natural factors, and other natural disasters which cause tremendous suffering to humans and animals. Can we apply the same answer given by the theists to the “problem of evil”. Did the earth need to have the capacity to wreak such havoc in order to have its own free will? I don’t see the sense in that.

Yes there is tremendous beauty in the universe and in this very world. The Grand Canyon is an example of stunning beauty and wonder. Yet I ask you a question, gentle reader: would you be willing to give up the Grand Canyon if that action could save one single child from suffering caused by neglect, extreme poverty and hunger, war, etc. I know that I would. Would you? Would God? Maybe the world is a mixed place. Not all bad and not all good but is it really the work of a Great and Perfect Designer? If we are to base our understanding of the design argument for the existence of God by first observing the designs made by man then that should open aish.com’s courtroom to the notion that a Perfect Being would not make an imperfect design. And since we are basing this whole argument on man-made design standards then we can make a strong case that, from a human point of view, this ain’t no perfect world. And remember, the whole design argument came from a human point of view.

Evidence versus evidence. More later.

Introducing Design Argument Girl with her pet reptile. She proves, without words, the existence of herself and of your ability to see. What beautiful eyes you have!

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