Ayala, Francisco J. Darwins Devolution: Design Without Designer.
According to Francisco
Ayala, Darwins achievement was to complete the Copernican revolution; biology
could now be explained in terms of universal, immanent, natural laws without
resorting explicitly to a Creator. The result was to bring biological organisms
into the realm of science. Many theologians have seen no contradiction between
Darwin and Christian faith, both at the time of Darwins writings and in the
century since. Natural selection is creative: in a sieve- like way it retains
rare but useful genes. But natural selection is not creative in the Christian
sense of creatio ex nihilo. Instead it is like a painter
mixing pigments on a canvas. It is a non- random process that promotes
adaptation, that is, combinations useful to the organisms. By proceeding
stepwise, it produces combinations of genes that otherwise would be highly
improbable. It lacks foresight or a preconceived plan, being the consequence of
differential reproduction. Thus, though it has the appearance of
purposefulness, it does not anticipate the environment of the future. It
accounts for the design of organisms, since adaptive variations increase
relative survival and reproduction. Aquinas and Paley understood that purely
random processes will not account for biological nature; but they could not recognize,
as Darwin saw, that these processes could be oriented by the functional design they convey to
organisms. In this sense they are not entirely random. Chance is an integral
part of evolution, but its random character is counteracted by natural selection
which preserves what is useful and eliminates the harmful. Without mutation,
evolution could not happen. Without natural selection, mutations would bring
disorganization and extinction. Thanks to Darwin we can view the process of
evolution as creative though not conscious. The biological world is the result
of natural processes governed by natural laws, and this vision has forever
changed how we perceive ourselves and our place in the universe.
Ayala next develops a
complex conception of teleology. An object or behavior is teleological when it
gives evidence of design or appears to be directed toward certain ends.
Features of organisms, such as the wings of a bird, are teleological when they
are adaptations which originate by natural selection and when they function to
increase the reproductive success of their carriers. Inanimate objects and
processes, such as a salt molecule or a mountain, are not teleological since
they are not directed towards specific ends. Teleological explanations, in
turn, account for the existence of teleological features. Ayala then
distinguishes between those actions or objects which are purposeful and those
which are not. The former exhibit artificial or external teleology. Those
resulting from actions which are not purposeful exhibit natural or internal
teleology. Bounded natural teleology, in turn, describes an end-state reached
in spite of environmental fluctuations, whereas unbounded teleology refers to
an end-state that is not specifically predetermined, but results from one of
several available alternatives. The adaptations of organisms are teleological
in this indeterminate sense. Finally, teleological explanations are fully
compatible with efficient causal explanations, and in some cases both are
required.
With this in mind Ayala
argues that Darwins theory of evolution and his explanation of design are no
more anti-Christian than are Newtons laws of motion. Divine action should
not be sought in terms of gaps in the scientific account of nature - although the
origin of the universe will always remain outside the bounds of scientific
explanation.
The essay concludes by
acknowledging the success of science as a way of knowing, a major source of
economic growth in the United States, a bringer of essential technologies, and
a mode of accumulating knowledge that spans generations. Still, science is not
the only way of knowing; we also have the arts, common sense, religion, and so
on, all of which far predate science. Science is universal in scope but
hopelessly incomplete. Much of what is left out, such as meaning and value, may
be considered more important than what science includes.
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