


Intelligent Design: The Origin of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic Categories
By: Stephen C. Meyer
Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington
November 30, 2005
On
August 4th, 2004 an extensive review essay by Dr. Stephen C. Meyer,
Director of Discovery Institute's Center for Science & Culture
appeared in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (volume 117, no. 2, pp. 213-239). The Proceedings
is a peer-reviewed biology journal published at the National Museum of
Natural History at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C.
In the article, entitled “The Origin of Biological Information and the
Higher Taxonomic Categories”, Dr. Meyer argues that no current
materialistic theory of evolution can account for the origin of the
information necessary to build novel animal forms. He proposes
intelligent design as an alternative explanation for the origin of
biological information and the higher taxa.
Due to an unusual number of inquiries about the article, Dr. Meyer, the
copyright holder, has decided to make the article available now in HTML
format on this website. (Off prints are also available from Discovery
Institute by writing to Keith Pennock at Kpennock@discovery.org. Please
provide your mailing address and we will dispatch a copy).
PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
117(2):213-239. 2004
The origin of biological information and the higher taxonomic categories
Stephen C. Meyer
Introduction
In a recent volume of the Vienna Series in a Theoretical Biology
(2003), Gerd B. Muller and Stuart Newman argue that what they call the
“origination of organismal form” remains an unsolved problem. In making
this claim, Muller and Newman (2003:3-10) distinguish two distinct
issues, namely, (1) the causes of form generation in the individual
organism during embryological development and (2) the causes
responsible for the production of novel organismal forms in the first
place during the history of life. To distinguish the latter case
(phylogeny) from the former (ontogeny), Muller and Newman use the term
“origination” to designate the causal processes by which biological
form first arose during the evolution of life. They insist that “the
molecular mechanisms that bring about biological form in modern day
embryos should not be confused” with the causes responsible for the
origin (or “origination”) of novel biological forms during the history
of life (p.3). They further argue that we know more about the causes of
ontogenesis, due to advances in molecular biology, molecular genetics
and developmental biology, than we do about the causes of
phylogenesis--the ultimate origination of new biological forms during
the remote past.
In making this claim, Muller and Newman are careful to affirm that
evolutionary biology has succeeded in explaining how preexisting forms
diversify under the twin influences of natural selection and variation
of genetic traits. Sophisticated mathematically-based models of
population genetics have proven adequate for mapping and understanding
quantitative variability and populational changes in organisms. Yet
Muller and Newman insist that population genetics, and thus
evolutionary biology, has not identified a specifically causal
explanation for the origin of true morphological novelty during the
history of life. Central to their concern is what they see as the
inadequacy of the variation of genetic traits as a source of new form
and structure. They note, following Darwin himself, that the sources of
new form and structure must precede the action of natural selection
(2003:3)--that selection must act on what already exists. Yet, in their
view, the “genocentricity” and “incrementalism” of the neo-Darwinian
mechanism has meant that an adequate source of new form and structure
has yet to be identified by theoretical biologists. Instead, Muller and
Newman see the need to identify epigenetic sources of morphological
innovation during the evolution of life. In the meantime, however, they
insist neo-Darwinism lacks any “theory of the generative” (p. 7).
As it happens, Muller and Newman are not alone in this judgment. In the
last decade or so a host of scientific essays and books have questioned
the efficacy of selection and mutation as a mechanism for generating
morphological novelty, as even a brief literature survey will
establish. Thomson (1992:107) expressed doubt that large-scale
morphological changes could accumulate via minor phenotypic changes at
the population genetic level. Miklos (1993:29) argued that
neo-Darwinism fails to provide a mechanism that can produce large-scale
innovations in form and complexity. Gilbert et al. (1996) attempted to
develop a new theory of evolutionary mechanisms to supplement classical
neo-Darwinism, which, they argued, could not adequately explain
macroevolution. As they put it in a memorable summary of the situation:
“starting in the 1970s, many biologists began questioning its
(neo-Darwinism's) adequacy in explaining evolution. Genetics might be
adequate for explaining microevolution, but microevolutionary changes
in gene frequency were not seen as able to turn a reptile into a mammal
or to convert a fish into an amphibian. Microevolution looks at
adaptations that concern the survival of the fittest, not the arrival
of the fittest. As Goodwin (1995) points out, 'the origin of
species--Darwin's problem--remains unsolved'“ (p. 361). Though Gilbert
et al. (1996) attempted to solve the problem of the origin of form by
proposing a greater role for developmental genetics within an otherwise
neo-Darwinian framework,1
numerous recent authors have continued to raise questions about the
adequacy of that framework itself or about the problem of the
origination of form generally (Webster & Goodwin 1996; Shubin &
Marshall 2000; Erwin 2000; Conway Morris 2000, 2003b; Carroll 2000;
Wagner 2001; Becker & Lonnig 2001; Stadler et al. 2001; Lonnig
& Saedler 2002; Wagner & Stadler 2003; Valentine 2004:189-194).
What lies behind this skepticism? Is it warranted? Is a new and
specifically causal theory needed to explain the origination of
biological form?
This review will address these questions. It will do so by analyzing
the problem of the origination of organismal form (and the
corresponding emergence of higher taxa) from a particular theoretical
standpoint. Specifically, it will treat the problem of the origination
of the higher taxonomic groups as a manifestation of a deeper problem,
namely, the problem of the origin of the information (whether genetic
or epigenetic) that, as it will be argued, is necessary to generate
morphological novelty.
In order to perform this analysis, and to make it relevant and
tractable to systematists and paleontologists, this paper will examine
a paradigmatic example of the origin of biological form and information
during the history of life: the Cambrian explosion. During the
Cambrian, many novel animal forms and body plans (representing new
phyla, subphyla and classes) arose in a geologically brief period of
time. The following information-based analysis of the Cambrian
explosion will support the claim of recent authors such as Muller and
Newman that the mechanism of selection and genetic mutation does not
constitute an adequate causal explanation of the origination of
biological form in the higher taxonomic groups. It will also suggest
the need to explore other possible causal factors for the origin of
form and information during the evolution of life and will examine some
other possibilities that have been proposed.
The Cambrian Explosion
The “Cambrian explosion” refers to the geologically sudden appearance
of many new animal body plans about 530 million years ago. At this
time, at least nineteen, and perhaps as many as thirty-five phyla of
forty total (Meyer et al. 2003), made their first appearance on earth
within a narrow five- to ten-million-year window of geologic time
(Bowring et al. 1993, 1998a:1, 1998b:40; Kerr 1993; Monastersky 1993;
Aris-Brosou & Yang 2003). Many new subphyla, between 32 and 48 of
56 total (Meyer et al. 2003), and classes of animals also arose at this
time with representatives of these new higher taxa manifesting
significant morphological innovations. The Cambrian explosion thus
marked a major episode of morphogenesis in which many new and disparate
organismal forms arose in a geologically brief period of time.
To say that the fauna of the Cambrian period appeared in a geologically
sudden manner also implies the absence of clear transitional
intermediate forms connecting Cambrian animals with simpler
pre-Cambrian forms. And, indeed, in almost all cases, the Cambrian
animals have no clear morphological antecedents in earlier Vendian or
Precambrian fauna (Miklos 1993, Erwin et al. 1997:132, Steiner &
Reitner 2001, Conway Morris 2003b:510, Valentine et al. 2003:519-520).
Further, several recent discoveries and analyses suggest that these
morphological gaps may not be merely an artifact of incomplete sampling
of the fossil record (Foote 1997, Foote et al. 1999, Benton & Ayala
2003, Meyer et al. 2003), suggesting that the fossil record is at least
approximately reliable (Conway Morris 2003b:505).
As a result, debate now exists about the extent to which this pattern
of evidence comports with a strictly monophyletic view of evolution
(Conway Morris 1998a, 2003a, 2003b:510; Willmer 1990, 2003). Further,
among those who accept a monophyletic view of the history of life,
debate exists about whether to privilege fossil or molecular data and
analyses. Those who think the fossil data provide a more reliable
picture of the origin of the Metazoan tend to think these animals arose
relatively quickly--that the Cambrian explosion had a “short fuse.”
(Conway Morris 2003b:505-506, Valentine & Jablonski 2003). Some
(Wray et al. 1996), but not all (Ayala et al. 1998), who think that
molecular phylogenies establish reliable divergence times from
pre-Cambrian ancestors think that the Cambrian animals evolved over a
very long period of time--that the Cambrian explosion had a “long
fuse.” This review will not address these questions of historical
pattern. Instead, it will analyze whether the neo-Darwinian process of
mutation and selection, or other processes of evolutionary change, can
generate the form and information necessary to produce the animals that
arise in the Cambrian. This analysis will, for the most part, 2
therefore, not depend upon assumptions of either a long or short fuse
for the Cambrian explosion, or upon a monophyletic or polyphyletic view
of the early history of life.
Defining Biological Form and Information
Form, like life itself, is easy to recognize but often hard to define
precisely. Yet, a reasonable working definition of form will suffice
for our present purposes. Form can be defined as the four-dimensional
topological relations of anatomical parts. This means that one can
understand form as a unified arrangement of body parts or material
components in a distinct shape or pattern (topology)--one that exists
in three spatial dimensions and which arises in time during ontogeny.
Insofar as any particular biological form constitutes something like a
distinct arrangement of constituent body parts, form can be seen as
arising from constraints that limit the possible arrangements of
matter. Specifically, organismal form arises (both in phylogeny and
ontogeny) as possible arrangements of material parts are constrained to
establish a specific or particular arrangement with an identifiable
three dimensional topography--one that we would recognize as a
particular protein, cell type, organ, body plan or organism. A
particular “form,” therefore, represents a highly specific and
constrained arrangement of material components (among a much larger set
of possible arrangements).
Understanding form in this way suggests a connection to the notion of
information in its most theoretically general sense. When Shannon
(1948) first developed a mathematical theory of information he equated
the amount of information transmitted with the amount of uncertainty
reduced or eliminated in a series of symbols or characters.
Information, in Shannon's theory, is thus imparted as some options are
excluded and others are actualized. The greater the number of options
excluded, the greater the amount of information conveyed. Further,
constraining a set of possible material arrangements by whatever
process or means involves excluding some options and actualizing
others. Thus, to constrain a set of possible material states is to
generate information in Shannon's sense. It follows that the
constraints that produce biological form also imparted information. Or conversely, one might say that producing organismal form by definition requires the generation of information.
In classical Shannon information theory, the amount of information in a
system is also inversely related to the probability of the arrangement
of constituents in a system or the characters along a communication
channel (Shannon 1948). The more improbable (or complex) the
arrangement, the more Shannon information, or information-carrying
capacity, a string or system possesses.
Since the 1960s, mathematical biologists have realized that Shannon's
theory could be applied to the analysis of DNA and proteins to measure
the information-carrying capacity of these macromolecules. Since DNA
contains the assembly instructions for building proteins, the
information-processing system in the cell represents a kind of
communication channel (Yockey 1992:110). Further, DNA conveys
information via specifically arranged sequences of nucleotide bases.
Since each of the four bases has a roughly equal chance of occurring at
each site along the spine of the DNA molecule, biologists can calculate
the probability, and thus the information-carrying capacity, of any
particular sequence n bases long.
The ease with which information theory applies to molecular biology has
created confusion about the type of information that DNA and proteins
possess. Sequences of nucleotide bases in DNA, or amino acids in a
protein, are highly improbable and thus have large information-carrying
capacities. But, like meaningful sentences or lines of computer code,
genes and proteins are also specified
with respect to function. Just as the meaning of a sentence depends
upon the specific arrangement of the letters in a sentence, so too does
the function of a gene sequence depend upon the specific arrangement of
the nucleotide bases in a gene. Thus, molecular biologists beginning
with Crick equated information not only with complexity but
also with “specificity,” where “specificity” or “specified” has meant
“necessary to function” (Crick 1958:144, 153; Sarkar, 1996:191).3
Molecular biologists such as Monod and Crick understood biological
information--the information stored in DNA and proteins--as something
more than mere complexity (or improbability). Their notion of
information associated both biochemical contingency and combinatorial
complexity with DNA sequences (allowing DNA's carrying capacity to be
calculated), but it also affirmed that sequences of nucleotides and
amino acids in functioning macromolecules possessed a high degree of specificity relative to the maintenance of cellular function.
The ease with which information theory applies to molecular biology has
also created confusion about the location of information in organisms.
Perhaps because the information carrying capacity of the gene could be
so easily measured, it has been easy to treat DNA, RNA and proteins as
the sole repositories of biological information. Neo-Darwinists in
particular have assumed that the origination of biological form could
be explained by recourse to processes of genetic variation and mutation
alone (Levinton 1988:485). Yet if one understands organismal form as
resulting from constraints on the possible arrangements of matter at
many levels in the biological hierarchy--from genes and proteins to
cell types and tissues to organs and body plans--then clearly
biological organisms exhibit many levels of information-rich structure.
Thus, we can pose a question, not only about the origin of genetic
information, but also about the origin of the information necessary to
generate form and structure at levels higher than that present in
individual proteins. We must also ask about the origin of the
“specified complexity,” as opposed to mere complexity, that
characterizes the new genes, proteins, cell types and body plans that
arose in the Cambrian explosion. Dembski (2002) has used the term
“complex specified information” (CSI) as a synonym for “specified
complexity” to help distinguish functional biological information from
mere Shannon information--that is, specified complexity from mere
complexity. This review will use this term as well.
The Cambrian Information Explosion
The Cambrian explosion represents a remarkable jump in the specified
complexity or “complex specified information” (CSI) of the biological
world. For over three billions years, the biological realm included
little more than bacteria and algae (Brocks et al. 1999). Then,
beginning about 570-565 million years ago (mya), the first complex
multicellular organisms appeared in the rock strata, including sponges,
cnidarians, and the peculiar Ediacaran biota (Grotzinger et al. 1995).
Forty million years later, the Cambrian explosion occurred (Bowring et
al. 1993). The emergence of the Ediacaran biota (570 mya), and then to
a much greater extent the Cambrian explosion (530 mya), represented
steep climbs up the biological complexity gradient.
One way to estimate the amount of new CSI that appeared with the
Cambrian animals is to count the number of new cell types that emerged
with them (Valentine 1995:91-93). Studies of modern animals suggest
that the sponges that appeared in the late Precambrian, for example,
would have required five cell types, whereas the more complex animals
that appeared in the Cambrian (e.g., arthropods) would have required
fifty or more cell types. Functionally more complex animals require
more cell types to perform their more diverse functions. New cell types
require many new and specialized proteins. New proteins, in turn,
require new genetic information. Thus an increase in the number of cell
types implies (at a minimum) a considerable increase in the amount of
specified genetic information. Molecular biologists have recently
estimated that a minimally complex single-celled organism would require
between 318 and 562 kilobase pairs of DNA to produce the proteins
necessary to maintain life (Koonin 2000). More complex single cells
might require upward of a million base pairs. Yet to build the proteins
necessary to sustain a complex arthropod such as a trilobite would
require orders of magnitude more coding instructions. The genome size
of a modern arthropod, the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster,
is approximately 180 million base pairs (Gerhart & Kirschner
1997:121, Adams et al. 2000). Transitions from a single cell to
colonies of cells to complex animals represent significant (and, in
principle, measurable) increases in CSI.
Building a new animal from a single-celled organism requires a vast
amount of new genetic information. It also requires a way of arranging
gene products--proteins--into higher levels of organization. New
proteins are required to service new cell types. But new proteins must
be organized into new systems within the cell; new cell types must be
organized into new tissues, organs, and body parts. These, in turn,
must be organized to form body plans. New animals, therefore, embody
hierarchically organized systems of lower-level parts within a
functional whole. Such hierarchical organization itself represents a
type of information, since body plans comprise both highly improbable
and functionally specified arrangements of lower-level parts. The
specified complexity of new body plans requires explanation in any
account of the Cambrian explosion.
Can neo-Darwinism explain the discontinuous increase in CSI that
appears in the Cambrian explosion--either in the form of new genetic
information or in the form of hierarchically organized systems of
parts? We will now examine the two parts of this question.
Novel Genes and Proteins
Many scientists and mathematicians have questioned the ability of
mutation and selection to generate information in the form of novel
genes and proteins. Such skepticism often derives from consideration of
the extreme improbability (and specificity) of functional genes and
proteins.
A typical gene contains over one thousand precisely arranged bases. For
any specific arrangement of four nucleotide bases of length n, there is a corresponding number of possible arrangements of bases, 4n. For any protein, there are 20n possible arrangements of protein-forming amino acids. A gene 999 bases in length represents one of 4999 possible nucleotide sequences; a protein of 333 amino acids is one of 20333 possibilities.
Since the 1960s, some biologists have thought functional proteins to be
rare among the set of possible amino acid sequences. Some have used an
analogy with human language to illustrate why this should be the case.
Denton (1986, 309-311), for example, has shown that meaningful words
and sentences are extremely rare among the set of possible combinations
of English letters, especially as sequence length grows. (The ratio of
meaningful 12-letter words to 12-letter sequences is 1/1014, the ratio of 100-letter sentences to possible 100-letter strings is 1/10100.) Further, Denton shows that most meaningful sentences are highly isolated
from one another in the space of possible combinations, so that random
substitutions of letters will, after a very few changes, inevitably
degrade meaning. Apart from a few closely clustered sentences
accessible by random substitution, the overwhelming majority of
meaningful sentences lie, probabilistically speaking, beyond the reach
of random search.
Denton (1986:301-324) and others have argued that similar constraints
apply to genes and proteins. They have questioned whether an undirected
search via mutation and selection would have a reasonable chance of
locating new islands of function--representing fundamentally new genes
or proteins--within the time available (Eden 1967, Shutzenberger 1967,
Lovtrup 1979). Some have also argued that alterations in sequencing
would likely result in loss of protein function before fundamentally
new function could arise (Eden 1967, Denton 1986). Nevertheless,
neither the extent to which genes and proteins are sensitive to
functional loss as a result of sequence change, nor the extent to which
functional proteins are isolated within sequence space, has been fully
known.
Recently, experiments in molecular biology have shed light on these
questions. A variety of mutagenesis techniques have shown that proteins
(and thus the genes that produce them) are indeed highly specified
relative to biological function (Bowie & Sauer 1989, Reidhaar-Olson
& Sauer 1990, Taylor et al. 2001). Mutagenesis research tests the
sensitivity of proteins (and, by implication, DNA) to functional loss
as a result of alterations in sequencing. Studies of proteins have long
shown that amino acid residues at many active positions cannot vary
without functional loss (Perutz & Lehmann 1968). More recent
protein studies (often using mutagenesis experiments) have shown that
functional requirements place significant constraints on sequencing
even at non-active site positions (Bowie & Sauer 1989,
Reidhaar-Olson & Sauer 1990, Chothia et al. 1998, Axe 2000, Taylor
et al. 2001). In particular, Axe (2000) has shown that multiple as
opposed to single position amino acid substitutions inevitably result
in loss of protein function, even when these changes occur at sites
that allow variation when altered in isolation. Cumulatively, these
constraints imply that proteins are highly sensitive to functional loss
as a result of alterations in sequencing, and that functional proteins
represent highly isolated and improbable arrangements of amino acids
-arrangements that are far more improbable, in fact, than would be
likely to arise by chance alone in the time available (Reidhaar-Olson
& Sauer 1990; Behe 1992; Kauffman 1995:44; Dembski 1998:175-223;
Axe 2000, 2004). (See below the discussion of the neutral theory of
evolution for a precise quantitative assessment.)
Of course, neo-Darwinists do not envision a completely random search
through the set of all possible nucleotide sequences--so-called
“sequence space.” They envision natural selection acting to preserve
small advantageous variations in genetic sequences and their
corresponding protein products. Dawkins (1996), for example, likens an
organism to a high mountain peak. He compares climbing the sheer
precipice up the front side of the mountain to building a new organism
by chance. He acknowledges that his approach up “Mount Improbable” will
not succeed. Nevertheless, he suggests that there is a gradual slope up
the backside of the mountain that could be climbed in small incremental
steps. In his analogy, the backside climb up “Mount Improbable”
corresponds to the process of natural selection acting on random
changes in the genetic text. What chance alone cannot accomplish
blindly or in one leap, selection (acting on mutations) can accomplish
through the cumulative effect of many slight successive steps.
Yet the extreme specificity and complexity of proteins presents a
difficulty, not only for the chance origin of specified biological
information (i.e., for random mutations acting alone), but also for
selection and mutation acting in concert. Indeed, mutagenesis
experiments cast doubt on each of the two scenarios by which
neo-Darwinists envisioned new information arising from the
mutation/selection mechanism (for review, see Lonnig 2001). For
neo-Darwinism, new functional genes either arise from non-coding
sections in the genome or from preexisting genes. Both scenarios are
problematic.
In the first scenario, neo-Darwinists envision new genetic information
arising from those sections of the genetic text that can presumably
vary freely without consequence to the organism. According to this
scenario, non-coding sections of the genome, or duplicated sections of
coding regions, can experience a protracted period of “neutral
evolution” (Kimura 1983) during which alterations in nucleotide
sequences have no discernible effect on the function of the organism.
Eventually, however, a new gene sequence will arise that can code for a
novel protein. At that point, natural selection can favor the new gene
and its functional protein product, thus securing the preservation and
heritability of both.
This scenario has the advantage of allowing the genome to vary through
many generations, as mutations “search” the space of possible base
sequences. The scenario has an overriding problem, however: the size of
the combinatorial space (i.e., the number of possible amino acid
sequences) and the extreme rarity and isolation of the functional
sequences within that space of possibilities. Since natural selection
can do nothing to help generate
new functional sequences, but rather can only preserve such sequences
once they have arisen, chance alone--random variation--must do the work
of information generation--that is, of finding the exceedingly rare
functional sequences within the set of combinatorial possibilities. Yet
the probability of randomly assembling (or “finding,” in the previous
sense) a functional sequence is extremely small.
Cassette mutagenesis experiments performed during the early 1990s
suggest that the probability of attaining (at random) the correct
sequencing for a short protein 100 amino acids long is about 1 in 1065
(Reidhaar-Olson & Sauer 1990, Behe 1992:65-69). This result agreed
closely with earlier calculations that Yockey (1978) had performed
based upon the known sequence variability of cytochrome c in different
species and other theoretical considerations. More recent mutagenesis
research has provided additional support for the conclusion that
functional proteins are exceedingly rare among possible amino acid
sequences (Axe 2000, 2004). Axe (2004) has performed site directed
mutagenesis experiments on a 150-residue protein-folding domain within
a B-lactamase enzyme. His experimental method improves upon earlier
mutagenesis techniques and corrects for several sources of possible
estimation error inherent in them. On the basis of these experiments,
Axe has estimated the ratio of (a) proteins of typical size (150
residues) that perform a specified function via any folded structure to
(b) the whole set of possible amino acids sequences of that size. Based
on his experiments, Axe has estimated his ratio to be 1 to 1077.
Thus, the probability of finding a functional protein among the
possible amino acid sequences corresponding to a 150-residue protein is
similarly 1 in 1077.
Other considerations imply additional improbabilities. First, new
Cambrian animals would require proteins much longer than 100 residues
to perform many necessary specialized functions. Ohno (1996) has noted
that Cambrian animals would have required complex proteins such as
lysyl oxidase in order to support their stout body structures. Lysyl
oxidase molecules in extant organisms comprise over 400 amino acids.
These molecules are both highly complex (non-repetitive) and
functionally specified. Reasonable extrapolation from mutagenesis
experiments done on shorter protein molecules suggests that the
probability of producing functionally sequenced proteins of this length
at random is so small as to make appeals to chance absurd, even
granting the duration of the entire universe. (See Dembski 1998:175-223
for a rigorous calculation of this “Universal Probability Bound”; See
also Axe 2004.) Yet, second, fossil data (Bowring et al. 1993, 1998a:1,
1998b:40; Kerr 1993; Monatersky 1993), and even molecular analyses
supporting deep divergence (Wray et al. 1996), suggest that the
duration of the Cambrian explosion (between 5-10 x 106 and, at most, 7 x 107 years) is far smaller than that of the entire universe (1.3-2 x 1010
years). Third, DNA mutation rates are far too low to generate the novel
genes and proteins necessary to building the Cambrian animals, given
the most probable duration of the explosion as determined by fossil
studies (Conway Morris 1998b). As Ohno (1996:8475) notes, even a
mutation rate of 10-9 per base pair per year results in only
a 1% change in the sequence of a given section of DNA in 10 million
years. Thus, he argues that mutational divergence of preexisting genes
cannot explain the origin of the Cambrian forms in that time.4
The selection/mutation mechanism faces another probabilistic obstacle.
The animals that arise in the Cambrian exhibit structures that would
have required many new types
of cells, each of which would have required many novel proteins to
perform their specialized functions. Further, new cell types require Asystems
of proteins that must, as a condition of functioning, act in close
coordination with one another. The unit of selection in such systems
ascends to the system as a whole. Natural selection selects for
functional advantage. But new cell types require whole systems of
proteins to perform their distinctive functions. In such cases, natural
selection cannot contribute to the process of information generation
until after the information necessary to build the requisite system
of proteins has arisen. Thus random variations must, again, do the work
of information generation--and now not simply for one protein, but for
many proteins arising at nearly the same time. Yet the odds of this
occurring by chance alone are, of course, far smaller than the odds of
the chance origin of a single gene or protein--so small in fact as to
render the chance origin of the genetic information necessary to build
a new cell type (a necessary but not sufficient condition of building a
new body plan) problematic given even the most optimistic estimates for
the duration of the Cambrian explosion.
Dawkins (1986:139) has noted that scientific theories can rely on only
so much “luck” before they cease to be credible. The neutral theory of
evolution, which, by its own logic, prevents natural selection from
playing a role in generating genetic information until after the fact,
relies on entirely too much luck. The sensitivity of proteins to
functional loss, the need for long proteins to build new cell types and
animals, the need for whole new systems
of proteins to service new cell types, the probable brevity of the
Cambrian explosion relative to mutation rates--all suggest the immense
improbability (and implausibility) of any scenario for the origination
of Cambrian genetic information that relies upon random variation alone
unassisted by natural selection.
Yet the neutral theory requires novel genes and proteins to
arise--essentially--by random mutation alone. Adaptive advantage
accrues after the generation of new functional genes and proteins. Thus, natural selection cannot play a role until
new information-bearing molecules have independently arisen. Thus
neutral theorists envisioned the need to scale the steep face of a
Dawkins-style precipice of which there is no gradually sloping backside--a situation that, by Dawkins' own logic, is probabilistically untenable.
In the second scenario, neo-Darwinists envisioned novel genes and
proteins arising by numerous successive mutations in the preexisting
genetic text that codes for proteins. To adapt Dawkins's metaphor, this
scenario envisions gradually climbing down one functional peak and then
ascending another. Yet mutagenesis experiments again suggest a
difficulty. Recent experiments show that, even when exploring a region
of sequence space populated by proteins of a single fold and function,
most multiple-position changes quickly lead to loss of function (Axe
2000). Yet to turn one protein into another with a completely novel
structure and function requires specified changes at many sites.
Indeed, the number of changes necessary to produce a new protein
greatly exceeds the number of changes that will typically produce
functional losses. Given this, the probability of escaping total
functional loss during a random search for the changes needed to
produce a new function is extremely small--and this probability
diminishes exponentially with each additional requisite change (Axe
2000). Thus, Axe's results imply that, in all probability, random
searches for novel proteins (through sequence space) will result in
functional loss long before any novel functional protein will emerge.
Blanco et al. have come to a similar conclusion. Using directed
mutagenesis, they have determined that residues in both the hydrophobic
core and on the surface of the protein play essential roles in
determining protein structure. By sampling intermediate sequences
between two naturally occurring sequences that adopt different folds,
they found that the intermediate sequences “lack a well defined
three-dimensional structure.” Thus, they conclude that it is unlikely
that a new protein fold via a series of folded intermediates sequences
(Blanco et al. 1999:741).
Thus, although this second neo-Darwinian scenario has the advantage of
starting with functional genes and proteins, it also has a lethal
disadvantage: any process of random mutation or rearrangement in the
genome would in all probability generate nonfunctional intermediate
sequences before fundamentally new functional genes or proteins would
arise. Clearly, nonfunctional intermediate sequences confer no survival
advantage on their host organisms. Natural selection favors only
functional advantage. It cannot select or favor nucleotide sequences or
polypeptide chains that do not yet perform biological functions, and
still less will it favor sequences that efface or destroy preexisting
function.
Evolving genes and proteins will range through a series of
nonfunctional intermediate sequences that natural selection will not
favor or preserve but will, in all probability, eliminate (Blanco et
al. 1999, Axe 2000). When this happens, selection-driven evolution will
cease. At this point, neutral evolution of the genome (unhinged from
selective pressure) may ensue, but, as we have seen, such a process
must overcome immense probabilistic hurdles, even granting cosmic time.
Thus, whether one envisions the evolutionary process beginning with a
noncoding region of the genome or a preexisting functional gene, the
functional specificity and complexity of proteins impose very stringent
limitations on the efficacy of mutation and selection. In the first
case, function must arise first, before natural selection can act to
favor a novel variation. In the second case, function must be
continuously maintained in order to prevent deleterious (or lethal)
consequences to the organism and to allow further evolution. Yet the
complexity and functional specificity of proteins implies that both
these conditions will be extremely difficult to meet. Therefore, the
neo-Darwinian mechanism appears to be inadequate to generate the new
information present in the novel genes and proteins that arise with the
Cambrian animals.
Novel Body Plans
The problems with the neo-Darwinian mechanism run deeper still. In
order to explain the origin of the Cambrian animals, one must account
not only for new proteins and cell types, but also for the origin of
new body plans. Within the past decade, developmental biology has
dramatically advanced our understanding of how body plans are built
during ontogeny. In the process, it has also uncovered a profound
difficulty for neo-Darwinism.
Significant morphological change in organisms requires attention to
timing. Mutations in genes that are expressed late in the development
of an organism will not affect the body plan. Mutations expressed early
in development, however, could conceivably produce significant
morphological change (Arthur 1997:21). Thus, events expressed early in
the development of organisms have the only realistic chance of
producing large-scale macroevolutionary change (Thomson 1992). As John
and Miklos (1988:309) explain, macroevolutionary change requires
alterations in the very early stages of ontogenesis.
Yet recent studies in developmental biology make clear that mutations
expressed early in development typically have deleterious effects
(Arthur 1997:21). For example, when early-acting body plan molecules,
or morphogens such as bicoid (which helps to set up the anterior-posterior head-to-tail axis in Drosophila),
are perturbed, development shuts down (Nusslein-Volhard & Wieschaus
1980, Lawrence & Struhl 1996, Muller & Newman 2003).5
The resulting embryos die. Moreover, there is a good reason for this.
If an engineer modifies the length of the piston rods in an internal
combustion engine without modifying the crankshaft accordingly, the
engine won't start. Similarly, processes of development are tightly
integrated spatially and temporally such that changes early in
development will require a host of other coordinated changes in
separate but functionally interrelated developmental processes
downstream. For this reason, mutations will be much more likely to be
deadly if they disrupt a functionally deeply-embedded structure such as
a spinal column than if they affect more isolated anatomical features
such as fingers (Kauffman 1995:200).
This problem has led to what McDonald (1983) has called “a great
Darwinian paradox” (p. 93). McDonald notes that genes that are observed
to vary within natural populations do not lead to major adaptive
changes, while genes that could cause major changes--the very stuff of
macroevolution--apparently do not vary. In other words, mutations of
the kind that macroevolution doesn't need (namely, viable genetic
mutations in DNA expressed late in development) do occur, but those
that it does need (namely, beneficial body plan mutations expressed
early in development) apparently don't occur.6
According to Darwin (1859:108) natural selection cannot act until
favorable variations arise in a population. Yet there is no evidence
from developmental genetics that the kind of variations required by
neo-Darwinism--namely, favorable body plan mutations--ever occur.
Developmental biology has raised another formidable problem for the
mutation/selection mechanism. Embryological evidence has long shown
that DNA does not wholly determine morphological form (Goodwin 1985,
Nijhout 1990, Sapp 1987, Muller & Newman 2003), suggesting that
mutations in DNA alone cannot account for the morphological changes
required to build a new body plan.
DNA helps direct protein synthesis.7
It also helps to regulate the timing and expression of the synthesis of
various proteins within cells. Yet, DNA alone does not determine how
individual proteins assemble themselves into larger systems of
proteins; still less does it solely determine how cell types, tissue
types, and organs arrange themselves into body plans (Harold 1995:2774,
Moss 2004). Instead, other factors--such as the three-dimensional
structure and organization of the cell membrane and cytoskeleton and
the spatial architecture of the fertilized egg--play important roles in
determining body plan formation during embryogenesis.
For example, the structure and location of the cytoskeleton influence
the patterning of embryos. Arrays of microtubules help to distribute
the essential proteins used during development to their correct
locations in the cell. Of course, microtubules themselves are made of
many protein subunits. Nevertheless, like bricks that can be used to
assemble many different structures, the tubulin subunits in the cell's
microtubules are identical to one another. Thus, neither the tubulin
subunits nor the genes that produce them account for the different
shape of microtubule arrays that distinguish different kinds of embryos
and developmental pathways. Instead, the structure of the microtubule
array itself is determined by the location and arrangement of its
subunits, not the properties of the subunits themselves. For this
reason, it is not possible to predict the structure of the cytoskeleton
of the cell from the characteristics of the protein constituents that
form that structure (Harold 2001:125).
Two analogies may help further clarify the point. At a building site,
builders will make use of many materials: lumber, wires, nails,
drywall, piping, and windows. Yet building materials do not determine
the floor plan of the house, or the arrangement of houses in a
neighborhood. Similarly, electronic circuits are composed of many
components, such as resistors, capacitors, and transistors. But such
lower-level components do not determine their own arrangement in an
integrated circuit. Biological symptoms also depend on hierarchical
arrangements of parts. Genes and proteins are made from simple building
blocks--nucleotide bases and amino acids--arranged in specific ways.
Cell types are made of, among other things, systems of specialized
proteins. Organs are made of specialized arrangements of cell types and
tissues. And body plans comprise specific arrangements of specialized
organs. Yet, clearly, the properties of individual proteins (or,
indeed, the lower-level parts in the hierarchy generally) do not fully
determine the organization of the higher-level structures and
organizational patterns (Harold 2001:125). It follows that the genetic
information that codes for proteins does not determine these
higher-level structures either.
These considerations pose another challenge to the sufficiency of the
neo-Darwinian mechanism. Neo-Darwinism seeks to explain the origin of
new information, form, and structure as a result of selection acting on
randomly arising variation at a very low level within the biological
hierarchy, namely, within the genetic text. Yet major morphological
innovations depend on a specificity of arrangement at a much higher
level of the organizational hierarchy, a level that DNA alone does not
determine. Yet if DNA is not wholly responsible for body plan
morphogenesis, then DNA sequences can mutate indefinitely, without
regard to realistic probabilistic limits, and still not produce a new
body plan. Thus, the mechanism of natural selection acting on random
mutations in DNA cannot in principle generate novel body plans, including those that first arose in the Cambrian explosion.
Of course, it could be argued that, while many single proteins do not
by themselves determine cellular structures and/or body plans, proteins
acting in concert with other proteins or suites of proteins could
determine such higher-level form. For example, it might be pointed out
that the tubulin subunits (cited above) are assembled by other helper
proteins--gene products--called Microtubule Associated Proteins (MAPS).
This might seem to suggest that genes and gene products alone do
suffice to determine the development of the three-dimensional structure
of the cytoskeleton.
Yet MAPS, and indeed many other necessary proteins, are only part of
the story. The location of specified target sites on the interior of
the cell membrane also helps to determine the shape of the
cytoskeleton. Similarly, so does the position and structure of the
centrosome which nucleates the microtubules that form the cytoskeleton.
While both the membrane targets and the centrosomes are made of
proteins, the location and form of these structures is not wholly
determined by the proteins that form them. Indeed, centrosome structure
and membrane patterns as a whole
convey three-dimensional structural information that helps determine
the structure of the cytoskeleton and the location of its subunits
(McNiven & Porter 1992:313-329). Moreover, the centrioles that
compose the centrosomes replicate independently of DNA replication
(Lange et al. 2000:235-249, Marshall & Rosenbaum 2000:187-205). The
daughter centriole receives its form from the overall structure of the
mother centriole, not from the individual gene products that constitute
it (Lange et al. 2000). In ciliates, microsurgery on cell membranes can
produce heritable changes in membrane patterns, even though the DNA of
the ciliates has not been altered (Sonneborn 1970:1-13, Frankel
1980:607-623; Nanney 1983:163-170). This suggests that membrane
patterns (as opposed to membrane constituents) are impressed directly
on daughter cells. In both cases, form is transmitted from parent
three-dimensional structures to daughter three-dimensional structures
directly and is not wholly contained in constituent proteins or genetic
information (Moss 2004).
Thus, in each new generation, the form and structure of the cell arises as the result of both
gene products and preexisting three-dimensional structure and
organization. Cellular structures are built from proteins, but proteins
find their way to correct locations in part because of preexisting
three-dimensional patterns and organization inherent in cellular
structures. Preexisting three-dimensional form present in the preceding
generation (whether inherent in the cell membrane, the centrosomes, the
cytoskeleton or other features of the fertilized egg) contributes to
the production of form in the next generation. Neither structural
proteins alone, nor the genes that code for them, are sufficient to
determine the three-dimensional shape and structure of the entities
they form. Gene products provide necessary, but not sufficient
conditions, for the development of three-dimensional structure within
cells, organs and body plans (Harold 1995:2767). But if this is so,
then natural selection acting on genetic variation alone cannot produce
the new forms that arise in history of life.
Self-Organizational Models
Of course, neo-Darwinism is not the only evolutionary theory for
explaining the origin of novel biological form. Kauffman (1995) doubts
the efficacy of the mutation/selection mechanism. Nevertheless, he has
advanced a self-organizational theory to account for the emergence of
new form, and presumably the information necessary to generate it.
Whereas neo-Darwinism attempts to explain new form as the consequence
of selection acting on random mutation, Kauffman suggests that
selection acts, not mainly on random variations, but on emergent
patterns of order that self-organize via the laws of nature.
Kauffman (1995:47-92) illustrates how this might work with various
model systems in a computer environment. In one, he conceives a system
of buttons connected by strings. Buttons represent novel genes or gene
products; strings represent the law-like forces of interaction that
obtain between gene products-i.e., proteins. Kauffman suggests that
when the complexity of the system (as represented by the number of
buttons and strings) reaches a critical threshold, new modes of
organization can arise in the system “for free”--that is, naturally and
spontaneously--after the manner of a phase transition in chemistry.
Another model that Kauffman develops is a system of interconnected
lights. Each light can flash in a variety of states--on, off,
twinkling, etc. Since there is more than one possible state for each
light, and many lights, there are a vast number of possible states that
the system can adopt. Further, in his system, rules determine how past
states will influence future states. Kauffman asserts that, as a result
of these rules, the system will, if properly tuned, eventually produce
a kind of order in which a few basic patterns of light activity recur
with greater-than-random frequency. Since these actual patterns of
light activity represent a small portion of the total number of
possible states in which the system can reside, Kauffman seems to imply
that self-organizational laws might similarly result in highly
improbable biological outcomes--perhaps even sequences (of bases or
amino acids) within a much larger sequence space of possibilities.
Do these simulations of self-organizational processes accurately model
the origin of novel genetic information? It is hard to think so.
First, in both examples, Kauffman presupposes but does not explain
significant sources of preexisting information. In his
buttons-and-strings system, the buttons represent proteins, themselves
packets of CSI, and the result of preexisting genetic information.
Where does this information come from? Kauffman (1995) doesn't say, but
the origin of such information is an essential part of what needs to be
explained in the history of life. Similarly, in his light system, the
order that allegedly arises for “for free” actually arises only if the
programmer of the model system “tunes” it in such a way as to keep it
from either (a) generating an excessively rigid order or (b) developing
into chaos (pp. 86-88). Yet this necessary tuning involves an
intelligent programmer selecting certain parameters and excluding
others--that is, inputting information.
Second, Kauffman's model systems are not constrained by functional
considerations and thus are not analogous to biological systems. A
system of interconnected lights governed by pre-programmed rules may
well settle into a small number of patterns within a much larger space
of possibilities. But because these patterns have no function, and need
not meet any functional requirements, they have no specificity
analogous to that present in actual organisms. Instead, examination of
Kauffman's (1995) model systems shows that they do not produce
sequences or systems characterized by specified
complexity, but instead by large amounts of symmetrical order or
internal redundancy interspersed with aperiodicity or (mere) complexity
(pp. 53, 89, 102). Getting a law-governed system to generate repetitive
patterns of flashing lights, even with a certain amount of variation,
is clearly interesting, but not biologically relevant. On the other
hand, a system of lights flashing the title of a Broadway play would
model a biologically relevant self-organizational process, at least if
such a meaningful or functionally specified sequence arose without
intelligent agents previously programming the system with equivalent
amounts of CSI. In any case, Kauffman's systems do not produce specified complexity, and thus do not offer promising models for explaining the new genes and proteins that arose in the Cambrian.
Even so, Kauffman suggests that his self-organizational models can
specifically elucidate aspects of the Cambrian explosion. According to
Kauffman (1995:199-201), new Cambrian animals emerged as the result of
“long jump” mutations that established new body plans in a discrete
rather than gradual fashion. He also recognizes that mutations
affecting early development are almost inevitably harmful. Thus, he
concludes that body plans, once established, will not change, and that
any subsequent evolution must occur within an established body plan
(Kauffman 1995:201). And indeed, the fossil record does show a curious
(from a neo-Darwinian point of view) top-down pattern of appearance, in
which higher taxa (and the body plans they represent) appear first,
only later to be followed by the multiplication of lower taxa
representing variations within those original body designs (Erwin et
al. 1987, Lewin 1988, Valentine & Jablonski 2003:518). Further, as
Kauffman expects, body plans appear suddenly and persist without
significant modification over time.
But here, again, Kauffman begs the most important question, which is:
what produces the new Cambrian body plans in the first place? Granted,
he invokes “long jump mutations” to explain this, but he identifies no
specific self-organizational process that can produce such mutations.
Moreover, he concedes a principle that undermines the plausibility of
his own proposal. Kauffman acknowledges that mutations that occur early
in development are almost inevitably deleterious. Yet developmental
biologists know that these are the only kind of mutations that have a
realistic chance of producing large-scale evolutionary change--i.e.,
the big jumps that Kauffman invokes. Though Kauffman repudiates the
neo-Darwinian reliance upon random mutations in favor of
self-organizing order, in the end, he must invoke the most implausible
kind of random mutation in order to provide a self-organizational
account of the new Cambrian body plans. Clearly, his model is not
sufficient.
Punctuated Equilibrium
Of course, still other causal explanations have been proposed. During
the 1970s, the paleontologists Eldredge and Gould (1972) proposed the
theory of evolution by punctuated equilibrium in order to account for a
pervasive pattern of “sudden appearance” and “stasis” in the fossil
record. Though advocates of punctuated equilibrium were mainly seeking
to describe the fossil record more accurately than earlier gradualist
neo-Darwinian models had done, they did also propose a mechanism--known
as species selection--by which the large morphological jumps evident in
fossil record might have been produced. According to punctuationalists,
natural selection functions more as a mechanism for selecting the
fittest species rather than the most-fit individual among a species.
Accordingly, on this model, morphological change should occur in
larger, more discrete intervals than it would given a traditional
neo-Darwinian understanding.
Despite its virtues as a descriptive model of the history of life,
punctuated equilibrium has been widely criticized for failing to
provide a mechanism sufficient to produce the novel form characteristic
of higher taxonomic groups. For one thing, critics have noted that the
proposed mechanism of punctuated evolutionary change simply lacked the
raw material upon which to work. As Valentine and Erwin (1987) note,
the fossil record fails to document a large pool of species prior to
the Cambrian. Yet the proposed mechanism of species selection requires
just such a pool of species upon which to act. Thus, they conclude that
the mechanism of species selection probably does not resolve the
problem of the origin of the higher taxonomic groups (p. 96).8
Further, punctuated equilibrium has not addressed the more specific and
fundamental problem of explaining the origin of the new biological
information (whether genetic or epigenetic) necessary to produce novel
biological form. Advocates of punctuated equilibrium might assume that
the new species (upon which natural selection acts) arise by known
microevolutionary processes of speciation (such as founder effect,
genetic drift or bottleneck effect) that do not necessarily depend upon
mutations to produce adaptive changes. But, in that case, the theory
lacks an account of how the specifically higher taxa arise.
Species selection will only produce more fit species. On the other
hand, if punctuationalists assume that processes of genetic mutation
can produce more fundamental morphological changes and variations, then
their model becomes subject to the same problems as neo-Darwinism (see
above). This dilemma is evident in Gould (2002:710) insofar as his
attempts to explain adaptive complexity inevitably employ classical
neo-Darwinian modes of explanation.9
Structuralism
Another attempt to explain the origin of form has been proposed by the
structuralists such as Gerry Webster and Brian Goodwin (1984, 1996).
These biologists, drawing on the earlier work of D'Arcy Thompson
(1942), view biological form as the result of structural constraints
imposed upon matter by morphogenetic rules or laws. For reasons similar
to those discussed above, the structuralists have insisted that these
generative or morphogenetic rules do not reside in the lower level
building materials of organisms, whether in genes or proteins. Webster
and Goodwin (1984:510-511) further envisioned morphogenetic rules or
laws operating ahistorically, similar to the way in which gravitational
or electromagnetic laws operate. For this reason, structuralists see
phylogeny as of secondary importance in understanding the origin of the
higher taxa, though they think that transformations of form can occur.
For structuralists, constraints on the arrangement of matter arise not
mainly as the result of historical contingencies--such as environmental
changes or genetic mutations--but instead because of the continuous
ahistorical operation of fundamental laws of form--laws that organize
or inform matter.
While this approach avoids many of the difficulties currently
afflicting neo-Darwinism (in particular those associated with its
“genocentricity”), critics (such as Maynard Smith 1986) of
structuralism have argued that the structuralist explanation of form
lacks specificity. They note that structuralists have been unable to
say just where laws of form reside--whether in the universe, or in
every possible world, or in organisms as a whole, or in just some part
of organisms. Further, according to structuralists, morphogenetic laws
are mathematical in character. Yet, structuralists have yet to specify
the mathematical formulae that determine biological forms.
Others (Yockey 1992; Polanyi 1967, 1968; Meyer 2003) have questioned
whether physical laws could in principle generate the kind of
complexity that characterizes biological systems. Structuralists
envision the existence of biological laws that produce form in much the
same way that physical laws produce form. Yet the forms that physicists
regard as manifestations of underlying laws are characterized by large
amounts of symmetric or redundant order, by relatively simple patterns
such as vortices or gravitational fields or magnetic lines of force.
Indeed, physical laws are typically expressed as differential equations
(or algorithms) that almost by definition describe recurring
phenomena--patterns of compressible “order” not “complexity” as defined
by algorithmic information theory (Yockey 1992:77-83). Biological
forms, by contrast, manifest greater complexity and derive in ontogeny
from highly complex initial conditions--i.e., non-redundant sequences
of nucleotide bases in the genome and other forms of information
expressed in the complex and irregular three-dimensional topography of
the organism or the fertilized egg. Thus, the kind of form that
physical laws produce is not analogous to biological form--at least not
when compared from the standpoint of (algorithmic) complexity. Further,
physical laws lack the information content to specify biology systems.
As Polyanyi (1967, 1968) and Yockey (1992:290) have shown, the laws of
physics and chemistry allow, but do not determine, distinctively
biological modes of organization. In other words, living systems are
consistent with, but not deducible, from physical-chemical laws
(1992:290).
Of course, biological systems do manifest some reoccurring patterns,
processes and behaviors. The same type of organism develops repeatedly
from similar ontogenetic processes in the same species. Similar
processes of cell division reoccur in many organisms. Thus, one might
describe certain biological processes as law-governed. Even so, the
existence of such biological regularities does not solve the problem of
the origin of form and information, since the recurring processes
described by such biological laws (if there be such laws) only occur as
the result of preexisting stores of (genetic and/or epigenetic)
information and these information-rich initial conditions impose the
constraints that produce the recurring behavior in biological systems.
(For example, processes of cell division recur with great frequency in
organisms, but depend upon information-rich DNA and proteins
molecules.) In other words, distinctively biological regularities
depend upon preexisting biological information. Thus, appeals to
higher-level biological laws presuppose, but do not explain, the
origination of the information necessary to morphogenesis.
Thus, structuralism faces a difficult in principle dilemma. On the one
hand, physical laws produce very simple redundant patterns that lack
the complexity characteristic of biological systems. On the other hand,
distinctively biological laws--if there are such laws--depend upon
preexisting information-rich structures. In either case, laws are not
good candidates for explaining the origination of biological form or
the information necessary to produce it.
Cladism: An Artifact of Classification?
Some cladists have advanced another approach to the problem of the
origin of form, specifically as it arises in the Cambrian. They have
argued that the problem of the origin of the phyla is an artifact of
the classification system, and therefore, does not require explanation.
Budd and Jensen (2000), for example, argue that the problem of the
Cambrian explosion resolves itself if one keeps in mind the cladistic
distinction between “stem” and “crown” groups. Since crown groups arise
whenever new characters are added to simpler more ancestral stem groups
during the evolutionary process, new phyla will inevitably arise once a
new stem group has arisen. Thus, for Budd and Jensen what requires
explanation is not the crown groups corresponding to the new Cambrian
phyla, but the earlier more primitive stem groups that presumably arose
deep in the Proterozoic. Yet since these earlier stem groups are by
definition less derived, explaining them will be considerably easier
than explaining the origin of the Cambrian animals de novo.
In any case, for Budd and Jensen the explosion of new phyla in the
Cambrian does not require explanation. As they put it, “given that the
early branching points of major clades is an inevitable result of clade
diversification, the alleged phenomenon of the phyla appearing early
and remaining morphologically static is not seen to require particular
explanation” (Budd & Jensen 2000:253).
While superficially plausible, perhaps, Budd and Jensen's attempt to
explain away the Cambrian explosion begs crucial questions. Granted, as
new characters are added to existing forms, novels morphology and
greater morphological disparity will likely result. But what causes new
characters to arise? And how does the information necessary to produce
new characters originate? Budd and Jensen do not specify. Nor can they
say how derived the ancestral forms are likely to have been, and what
processes, might have been sufficient to produce them. Instead, they
simply assume the sufficiency of known neo-Darwinian mechanisms (Budd
& Jensen 2000:288). Yet, as shown above, this assumption is now
problematic. In any case, Budd and Jensen do not explain what causes
the origination of biological form and information.
Convergence and Teleological Evolution
More recently, Conway Morris (2000, 2003c) has suggested another
possible explanation based on the tendency for evolution to converge on
the same structural forms during the history of life. Conway Morris
cites numerous examples of organisms that possess very similar forms
and structures, even though such structures are often built from
different material substrates and arise (in ontogeny) by the expression
of very different genes. Given the extreme improbability of the same
structures arising by random mutation and selection in disparate
phylogenies, Conway Morris argues that the pervasiveness of convergent
structures suggests that evolution may be in some way “channeled”
toward similar functional and/or structural endpoints. Such an
end-directed understanding of evolution, he admits, raises the
controversial prospect of a teleological or purposive element in the
history of life. For this reason, he argues that the phenomenon of
convergence has received less attention than it might have otherwise.
Nevertheless, he argues that just as physicists have reopened the
question of design in their discussions of anthropic fine-tuning, the
ubiquity of convergent structures in the history of life has led some
biologists (Denton 1998) to consider extending teleological thinking to
biology. And, indeed, Conway Morris himself intimates that the
evolutionary process might be “underpinned by a purpose” (2000:8,
2003b:511).
Conway Morris, of course, considers this possibility in relation to a
very specific aspect of the problem of organismal form, namely, the
problem of explaining why the same forms arise repeatedly in so many
disparate lines of decent. But this raises a question. Could a similar
approach shed explanatory light on the more general causal question
that has been addressed in this review? Could the notion of purposive
design help provide a more adequate explanation for the origin of
organismal form generally? Are there reasons to consider design as an
explanation for the origin of the biological information necessary to
produce the higher taxa and their corresponding morphological novelty?
The remainder of this review will suggest that there are such reasons.
In so doing, it may also help explain why the issue of teleology or
design has reemerged within the scientific discussion of biological
origins (Denton 1986, 1998; Thaxton et al. 1992; Kenyon & Mills
1996: Behe 1996, 2004; Dembski 1998, 2002, 2004; Conway Morris 2000,
2003a, 2003b, Lonnig 2001; Lonnig & Saedler 2002; Nelson &
Wells 2003; Meyer 2003, 2004; Bradley 2004) and why some scientists and
philosophers of science have considered teleological explanations for
the origin of form and information despite strong methodological
prohibitions against design as a scientific hypothesis (Gillespie 1979,
Lenior 1982:4).
First, the possibility of design as an explanation follows logically
from a consideration of the deficiencies of neo-Darwinism and other
current theories as explanations for some of the more striking
“appearances of design” in biological systems. Neo-Darwinists such as
Ayala (1994:5), Dawkins (1986:1), Mayr (1982:xi-xii) and Lewontin
(1978) have long acknowledged that organisms appear to have been
designed. Of course, neo-Darwinists assert that what Ayala (1994:5)
calls the “obvious design” of living things is only apparent since the
selection/mutation mechanism can explain the origin of complex form and
organization in living systems without an appeal to a designing agent.
Indeed, neo-Darwinists affirm that mutation and selection--and perhaps
other similarly undirected mechanisms--are fully sufficient to explain
the appearance of design in biology. Self-organizational theorists and
punctuationalists modify this claim, but affirm its essential tenet.
Self-organization theorists argue that natural selection acting on self
organizing order can explain the complexity of living things--again,
without any appeal to design. Punctuationalists similarly envision
natural selection acting on newly arising species with no actual design
involved.
And clearly, the neo-Darwinian mechanism does explain many appearances
of design, such as the adaptation of organisms to specialized
environments that attracted the interest of 19th century biologists.
More specifically, known microevolutionary processes appear quite
sufficient to account for changes in the size of Galapagos finch beaks
that have occurred in response to variations in annual rainfall and
available food supplies (Weiner 1994, Grant 1999).
But does neo-Darwinism, or any other fully materialistic model, explain
all appearances of design in biology, including the body plans and
information that characterize living systems? Arguably, biological
forms--such as the structure of a chambered nautilus, the organization
of a trilobite, the functional integration of parts in an eye or
molecular machine--attract our attention in part because the organized
complexity of such systems seems reminiscent of our own designs. Yet,
this review has argued that neo-Darwinism does not adequately account
for the origin of all appearances of design, especially if one
considers animal body plans, and the information necessary to construct
them, as especially striking examples of the appearance of design in
living systems. Indeed, Dawkins (1995:11) and Gates (1996:228) have
noted that genetic information bears an uncanny resemblance to computer
software or machine code. For this reason, the presence of CSI in
living organisms, and the discontinuous increases of CSI that occurred
during events such as the Cambrian explosion, appears at least
suggestive of design.
Does neo-Darwinism or any other purely materialistic model of
morphogenesis account for the origin of the genetic and other forms of
CSI necessary to produce novel organismal form? If not, as this review
has argued, could the emergence of novel information-rich genes,
proteins, cell types and body plans have resulted from actual design,
rather than a purposeless process that merely mimics the powers of a
designing intelligence? The logic of neo-Darwinism, with its specific
claim to have accounted for the appearance of design, would itself seem
to open the door to this possibility. Indeed, the historical
formulation of Darwinism in dialectical opposition to the design
hypothesis (Gillespie 1979), coupled with the neo-Darwinism's inability
to account for many salient appearances of design including the
emergence of form and information, would seem logically to reopen the
possibility of actual (as opposed to apparent) design in the history of
life.
A second reason for considering design as an explanation for these
phenomena follows from the importance of explanatory power to
scientific theory evaluation and from a consideration of the potential
explanatory power of the design hypothesis. Studies in the methodology
and philosophy of science have shown that many scientific theories,
particularly in the historical sciences, are formulated and justified
as inferences to the best explanation (Lipton 1991:32-88, Brush
1989:1124-1129, Sober 2000:44). Historical scientists, in particular,
assess or test competing hypotheses by evaluating which hypothesis
would, if true, provide the best explanation for some set of relevant
data (Meyer 1991, 2002; Cleland 2001:987-989, 2002:474-496).10
Those with greater explanatory power are typically judged to be better,
more probably true, theories. Darwin (1896:437) used this method of
reasoning in defending his theory of universal common descent.
Moreover, contemporary studies on the method of “inference to the best
explanation” have shown that determining which among a set of competing
possible explanations constitutes the best depends upon judgments about
the causal adequacy, or “causal powers,” of competing explanatory
entities (Lipton 1991:32-88). In the historical sciences,
uniformitarian and/or actualistic (Gould 1965, Simpson 1970, Rutten
1971, Hooykaas 1975) canons of method suggest that judgments about
causal adequacy should derive from our present knowledge of cause and
effect relationships. For historical scientists, “the present is the
key to the past” means that present experience-based knowledge of cause
and effect relationships typically guides the assessment of the
plausibility of proposed causes of past events.
Yet it is precisely for this reason that current advocates of the
design hypothesis want to reconsider design as an explanation for the
origin of biological form and information. This review, and much of the
literature it has surveyed, suggests that four of the most prominent
models for explaining the origin of biological form fail to provide
adequate causal explanations for the discontinuous increases of CSI
that are required to produce novel morphologies. Yet, we have repeated
experience of rational and conscious agents--in particular
ourselves--generating or causing increases in complex specified
information, both in the form of sequence-specific lines of code and in
the form of hierarchically arranged systems of parts.
In the first place, intelligent human agents--in virtue of their
rationality and consciousness--have demonstrated the power to produce
information in the form of linear sequence-specific arrangements of
characters. Indeed, experience affirms that information of this type
routinely arises from the activity of intelligent agents. A computer
user who traces the information on a screen back to its source
invariably comes to a mind--that
of a software engineer or programmer. The information in a book or
inscriptions ultimately derives from a writer or scribe--from a mental,
rather than a strictly material, cause. Our experience-based knowledge
of information-flow confirms that systems with large amounts of
specified complexity (especially codes and languages) invariably
originate from an intelligent source from a mind or personal agent. As
Quastler (1964) put it, the “creation of new information is habitually
associated with conscious activity” (p. 16). Experience teaches this
obvious truth.
Further, the highly specified hierarchical arrangements of parts in animal body plans also suggest design,
again because of our experience of the kinds of features and systems
that designers can and do produce. At every level of the biological
hierarchy, organisms require specified and highly improbable
arrangements of lower-level constituents in order to maintain their
form and function. Genes require specified arrangements of nucleotide
bases; proteins require specified arrangements of amino acids; new cell
types require specified arrangements of systems of proteins; body plans
require specialized arrangements of cell types and organs. Organisms
not only contain information-rich components (such as proteins and
genes), but they comprise information-rich arrangements of those
components and the systems that comprise them. Yet we know, based on
our present experience of cause and effect relationships, that design
engineers--possessing purposive intelligence and rationality--have the
ability to produce information-rich hierarchies in which both
individual modules and the arrangements of those modules exhibit
complexity and specificity--information so defined. Individual
transistors, resistors, and capacitors exhibit considerable complexity
and specificity of design; at a higher level of organization, their
specific arrangement within an integrated circuit represents additional
information and reflects further design. Conscious and rational agents
have, as part of their powers of purposive intelligence, the capacity
to design information-rich parts and to organize those parts into
functional information-rich systems and hierarchies. Further, we know
of no other causal entity or process that has this capacity. Clearly,
we have good reason to doubt that mutation and selection,
self-organizational processes or laws of nature, can produce the
information-rich components, systems, and body plans necessary to
explain the origination of morphological novelty such as that which
arises in the Cambrian period.
There is a third reason to consider purpose or design as an explanation
for the origin of biological form and information: purposive agents
have just those necessary powers that natural selection lacks as a
condition of its causal adequacy. At several points in the previous
analysis, we saw that natural selection lacked the ability to generate
novel information precisely because it can only act after
new functional CSI has arisen. Natural selection can favor new
proteins, and genes, but only after they perform some function. The job
of generating new functional genes, proteins and systems of proteins
therefore falls entirely to random mutations. Yet without functional
criteria to guide a search through the space of possible sequences,
random variation is probabilistically doomed. What is needed is not
just a source of variation (i.e., the freedom to search a space of
possibilities) or a mode of selection that can operate after the fact
of a successful search, but instead a means of selection that (a)
operates during a search--before success--and that (b) is guided by
information about, or knowledge of, a functional target.
Demonstration of this requirement has come from an unlikely quarter:
genetic algorithms. Genetic algorithms are programs that allegedly
simulate the creative power of mutation and selection. Dawkins and
Kuppers, for example, have developed computer programs that putatively
simulate the production of genetic information by mutation and natural
selection (Dawkins 1986:47-49, Kuppers 1987:355-369). Nevertheless, as
shown elsewhere (Meyer 1998:127-128, 2003:247-248), these programs only
succeed by the illicit expedient of providing the computer with a
“target sequence” and then treating relatively greater proximity to future
function (i.e., the target sequence), not actual present function, as a
selection criterion. As Berlinski (2000) has argued, genetic algorithms
need something akin to a “forward looking memory” in order to succeed.
Yet such foresighted selection has no analogue in nature. In biology,
where differential survival depends upon maintaining function,
selection cannot occur before new functional sequences arise. Natural
selection lacks foresight.
What natural selection lacks, intelligent selection--purposive or
goal-directed design--provides. Rational agents can arrange both matter
and symbols with distant goals in mind. In using language, the human
mind routinely “finds” or generates highly improbable linguistic
sequences to convey an intended or preconceived
idea. In the process of thought, functional objectives precede and
constrain the selection of words, sounds and symbols to generate
functional (and indeed meaningful) sequences from among a vast ensemble
of meaningless alternative combinations of sound or symbol (Denton
1986:309-311). Similarly, the construction of complex technological
objects and products, such as bridges, circuit boards, engines and
software, result from the application of goal-directed constraints
(Polanyi 1967, 1968). Indeed, in all functionally integrated complex
systems where the cause is known by experience or observation, design
engineers or other intelligent agents applied boundary constraints to
limit possibilities in order to produce improbable forms, sequences or
structures. Rational agents have repeatedly demonstrated the capacity
to constrain the possible to actualize improbable but initially
unrealized future functions. Repeated experience affirms that
intelligent agents (minds) uniquely possess such causal powers.
Analysis of the problem of the origin of biological information,
therefore, exposes a deficiency in the causal powers of natural
selection that corresponds precisely to powers that agents are uniquely
known to possess. Intelligent agents have foresight. Such agents can
select functional goals before
they exist. They can devise or select material means to accomplish
those ends from among an array of possibilities and then actualize
those goals in accord with a preconceived design plan or set of
functional requirements. Rational agents can constrain combinatorial
space with distant outcomes in mind. The causal powers that natural
selection lacks--almost by definition--are associated with the
attributes of consciousness and rationality--with purposive
intelligence. Thus, by invoking design to explain the origin of new
biological information, contemporary design theorists are not positing
an arbitrary explanatory element unmotivated by a consideration of the
evidence. Instead, they are positing an entity possessing precisely the
attributes and causal powers that the phenomenon in question requires
as a condition of its production and explanation.
Conclusion
An experience-based analysis of the causal powers of various
explanatory hypotheses suggests purposive or intelligent design as a
causally adequate--and perhaps the most causally adequate--explanation
for the origin of the complex specified information required to build
the Cambrian animals and the novel forms they represent. For this
reason, recent scientific interest in the design hypothesis is unlikely
to abate as biologists continue to wrestle with the problem of the
origination of biological form and the higher taxa.
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End Notes
1 Specifically,
Gilbert et al. (1996) argued that changes in morphogenetic fields might
produce large-scale changes in the developmental programs and,
ultimately, body plans of organisms. Yet they offered no evidence that
such fields--if indeed they exist--can be altered to produce
advantageous variations in body plan, though this is a necessary
condition of any successful causal theory of macroevolution.
2
If one takes the fossil record at face value and assumes that the
Cambrian explosion took place within a relatively narrow 5-10 million
year window, explaining the origin of the information necessary to
produce new proteins, for example, becomes more acute in part because
mutation rates would not have been sufficient to generate the number of
changes in the genome necessary to build the new proteins for more
complex Cambrian animals (Ohno 1996:8475-8478). This review will argue
that, even if one allows several hundred million years for the origin
of the metazoan, significant probabilistic and other difficulties
remain with the neo-Darwinian explanation of the origin of form and
information.
3 As Crick put it, “information means here the precise determination of sequence, either of bases in the nucleic acid or on amino acid residues in the protein” (Crick 1958:144, 153).
4
To solve this problem Ohno himself proposes the existence of a
hypothetical ancestral form that possessed virtually all the genetic
information necessary to produce the new body plans of the Cambrian
animals. He asserts that this ancestor and its “pananimalian genome”
might have arisen several hundred million years before the Cambrian
explosion. On this view, each of the different Cambrian animals would
have possessed virtually identical genomes, albeit with considerable
latent and unexpressed capacity in the case of each individual form
(Ohno 1996:8475-8478). While this proposal might help explain the
origin of the Cambrian animal forms by reference to preexisting genetic
information, it does not solve, but instead merely displaces, the
problem of the origin of the genetic information necessary to produce
these new forms.
5
Some have suggested that mutations in “master regulator” Hox genes
might provide the raw material for body plan morphogenesis. Yet there
are two problems with this proposal. First, Hox gene expression begins
only after the foundation of the body plan has been established in
early embryogenesis. (Davidson 2001:66). Second, Hox genes are highly
conserved across many disparate phyla and so cannot account for the
morphological differences that exist between the phyla (Valentine
2004:88).
6
Notable differences in the developmental pathways of similar organisms
have been observed. For example, congeneric species of sea urchins
(from genus Heliocidaris) exhibit striking differences in their
developmental pathways (Raff 1999:110-121). Thus, it might be argued
that such differences show that early developmental programs can in
fact be mutated to produce new forms. Nevertheless, there are two
problems with this claim. First, there is no direct evidence that
existing differences in sea urchin development arose by mutation.
Second, the observed differences in the developmental programs of
different species of sea urchins do not result in new body plans, but
instead in highly conserved structures. Despite differences in
developmental patterns, the endpoints are the same. Thus, even if it
can be assumed that mutations produced the differences in developmental
pathways, it must be acknowledged that such changes did not result in
novel form.
7
Of course, many post-translation processes of modification also play a
role in producing a functional protein. Such processes make it
impossible to predict a protein's final sequencing from its
corresponding gene sequence alone (Sarkar 1996:199-202).
8
Erwin (2004:21), although friendly to the possibility of species
selection, argues that Gould provides little evidence for its
existence. “The difficulty” writes Erwin of species selection, “...is
that we must rely on Gould's arguments for theoretical plausibility and
sufficient relative frequency. Rarely is a mass of data presented to
justify and support Gould's conclusion.” Indeed, Gould (2002) himself
admitted that species selection remains largely a hypothetical
construct: “I freely admit that well-documented cases of species
selection do not permeate the literature” (p. 710).
9”I
do not deny either the wonder, or the powerful importance, of organized
adaptive complexity. I recognize that we know no mechanism for the
origin of such organismal features other than conventional natural
selection at the organismic level--for the sheer intricacy and
elaboration of good biomechanical design surely precludes either random
production, or incidental origin as a side consequence of active
processes at other levels” (Gould 2002:710). “Thus, we do not challenge
the efficacy or the cardinal importance of organismal selection. As
previously discussed, I fully agree with Dawkins (1986) and others that
one cannot invoke a higher-level force like species selection to
explain 'things that organisms do'--in particular, the stunning panoply
of organismic adaptations that has always motivated our sense of wonder
about the natural world, and that Darwin (1859) described, in one of
his most famous lines (3), as 'that perfection of structure and
coadaptation which most justly excites our admiration'“ (Gould
2002:886).
10
Theories in the historical sciences typically make claims about what
happened in the past, or what happened in the past to cause particular
events to occur (Meyer 1991:57-72). For this reason, historical
scientific theories are rarely tested by making predictions about what
will occur under controlled laboratory conditions (Cleland 2001:987,
2002:474-496). Instead, such theories are usually tested by comparing
their explanatory power against that of their competitors with respect
to already known facts. Even in the case in which historical theories
make claims about past causes they usually do so on the basis of
preexisting knowledge of cause and effect relationships. Nevertheless,
prediction may play a limited role in testing historical scientific
theories since such theories may have implications as to what kind of
evidence is likely to emerge in the future. For example, neo-Darwinism
affirms that new functional sections of the genome arise by trial and
error process of mutation and subsequent selection. For this reason,
historically many neo-Darwinists expected or predicted that the large
non-coding regions of the genome--so-called “junk DNA”--would lack
function altogether (Orgel & Crick 1980). On this line of thinking,
the nonfunctional sections of the genome represent nature's failed
experiments that remain in the genome as a kind of artifact of the past
activity of the mutation and selection process. Advocates of the design
hypotheses on the other hand, would have predicted that non-coding
regions of the genome might well reveal hidden functions, not only
because design theorists do not think that new genetic information
arises by a trial and error process of mutation and selection, but also
because designed systems are often functionally polyvalent. Even so, as
new studies reveal more about the functions performed by the non-coding
regions of the genome (Gibbs 2003), the design hypothesis can no longer
be said to make this claim in the form of a specifically
future-oriented prediction. Instead, the design hypothesis might be
said to gain confirmation or support from its ability to explain this
now known evidence, albeit after the fact. Of course, neo Darwinists
might also amend their original prediction using various auxiliary
hypotheses to explain away the presence of newly discovered functions
in the non-coding regions of DNA. In both cases, considerations of ex post facto explanatory power reemerge as central to assessing and testing competing historical theories.