Main   Terms   People   Interviews   Resources   Events

Punctuated Equilibrium and Radical Contingency

Darwin supposed that variation would involve very small changes that might be difficult to detect and would initially appear to have little significance for natural selection. The idea that evolution proceeds by such small steps and never makes jumps, is a key ‘dogma’ in neo-Darwinism. It is called gradualism. There have been some challenges to this belief but the most significant have been by Eldredge and Gould, stemming from a paper in 1972. They stated that there was strong evidence in the fossil record for long periods of stasis, during which virtually no evolution occurred. These long periods of several million years were punctuated by relatively short periods of rapid evolution, over periods of 5,000 to 50,000 years, which is very brief in geological time. This view has more or less been integrated into neo-Darwinism.

The work of Stephen Jay Gould in particular remains important, through his resolute resistance to Dawkins’ genetic reductionism, his insistence that evolution cannot be equated with progress, and his emphasis on historical contingency. In his beautiful book Wonderful Life, on the fossil evidence of the Burgess Shale, a sediment in the Canadian Rockies, Gould emphasises that it would have been impossible, inspecting the range of organisms of 500 million years ago, to say which would survive into later eras, yet all the vertebrates we know are thought to be descended from a single, insignificant-seeming type of worm called Pikaia. So running the tape of life again would be very unlikely to give rise to creatures like ourselves.Gould, SJ, Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History, especially Chapter V.

The status of Gould’s conclusions in Wonderful Life has recently been challenged by Simon Conway Morris in his The Crucible of Creation (1998).Conway Morris, S, The Crucible of Creation (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998). For other rebuttals of Gould see Dennett, DC, Darwin’s Dangerous Idea (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1995) pp300-08 and...Conway Morris, one of the principal investigators of the Burgess Shale, takes issue in particular with one of Gould’s main points - that the last 500 million years have been characterised much more by the ‘grim reaper’ of extinction than by the continual branching of the tree of life. Different analyses of the data can give a very different conclusion - that evolutionary innovation has persisted, and shown continual evidence of convergence (the same characteristics arising by different evolutionary paths). Conway Morris infers from this that it was extremely likely that some form of complex life, such as humanity, would have evolved.Conway Morris, 1998, 13-14, 199-205. See God, Humanity and the Cosmos pp276-79.

Email link | Feedback | Contributed by: Dr. Christopher Southgate and Dr. Michael Robert Negus
Source: God, Humanity and the Cosmos  (T&T Clark, 1999)

Topic Sets Available

AAAS Report on Stem-Cells

AstroTheology: Religious Reflections on Extraterrestrial Life Forms

Agency: Human, Robotic and Divine
Becoming Human: Brain, Mind, Emergence
Big Bang Cosmology and Theology (GHC)
Cosmic Questions Interviews

Cosmos and Creator
Creativity, Spirituality and Computing Technologies
CTNS Content Home
Darwin: A Friend to Religion?
Demystifying Information Technology
Divine Action (GHC)
Dreams and Dreaming: Neuroscientific and Religious Visions'
E. Coli at the No Free Lunchroom
Engaging Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence: An Adventure in Astro-Ethics
Evangelical Atheism: a response to Richard Dawkins
Ecology and Christian Theology
Evolution: What Should We Teach Our Children in Our Schools?
Evolution and Providence
Evolution and Creation Survey
Evolution and Theology (GHC)
Evolution, Creation, and Semiotics

The Expelled Controversy
Faith and Reason: An Introduction
Faith in the Future: Religion, Aging, and Healthcare in the 21st Century

Francisco Ayala on Evolution

From Christian Passions to Scientific Emotions
Genetic Engineering and Food

Genetics and Ethics
Genetic Technologies - the Radical Revision of Human Existence and the Natural World

Genomics, Nanotechnology and Robotics
Getting Mind out of Meat
God and Creation: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Perspectives on Big Bang Cosmology
God, Humanity and the Cosmos: A Textbook in Science and Religion
God the Spirit - and Natural Science
Historical Examples of the Science and Religion Debate (GHC)
History of Creationism
Intelligent Design Coming Clean

Issues for the Millennium: Cloning and Genetic Technologies
Jean Vanier of L'Arche
Nano-Technology and Nano-ethics
Natural Science and Christian Theology - A Select Bibliography
Neuroscience and the Soul
Outlines of the Science and Religion Debate (GHC)

Perspectives on Evolution

Physics and Theology
Quantum Mechanics and Theology (GHC)
Questions that Shape Our Future
Reductionism (GHC)
Reintroducing Teleology Into Science
Science and Suffering

Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action (CTNS/Vatican Series)

Space Exploration and Positive Stewardship

Stem-Cell Debate: Ethical Questions
Stem-Cell Ethics: A Theological Brief

Stem-Cell Questions
Theistic Evolution: A Christian Alternative to Atheism, Creationism, and Intelligent Design...
Theology and Science: Current Issues and Future Directions
Unscientific America: How science illiteracy threatens our future
Will ET End Religion?

Current Stats: topics: >2600, links: >300,000, video: 200 hours.