292 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
292 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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From: kalki33!system@lakes.trenton.sc.us
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Newsgroups: talk.origins
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Subject: Was there an Eve?
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Message-ID: <HD0PuB1w165w@kalki33>
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Date: Tue, 24 Nov 92 00:06:28 EST
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Organization: Kalki's Infoline BBS, Aiken, SC, USA
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Lines: 283
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From Back to Godhead magazine, Sept/Oct 1992
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WAS THERE AN EVE?
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by Sadaputa Dasa
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(c) 1992 by the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust.
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In a 1987 article in the prestigious journal Nature, three biochemists
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published a study of mitochondrial DNA's from 147 people living on five
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continents. The biochemists stated, "All these mitochondrial DNA's stem
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from one woman who is postulated to have lived about 200,000 years ago,
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probably in Africa."[1]
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The story became a sensation. The woman was called the African Eve, and
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Newsweek put her on its cover. There she was -- the single ancestor of
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all living human beings.
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Eve was one in a population of primitive human beings. But all human
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lineages not deriving from her have perished. For students of human
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evolution, one important implication of this finding was that Asian
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populations of Homo erectus, including the famous Peking ape men, must
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not have been among our ancestors. Those ape men couldn't have descended
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from Eve, it was thought, because they lived in Asia before 200,000
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years ago.
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Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) carries genetic instructions for the
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energy-making factories of human cells. Unlike other genetic material,
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it is transmitted to offspring only from the mother, with no
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contribution from the father. This means that the descent of mtDNA makes
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a simple branching tree that is easy to study.
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Computer studies on the sample of 147 people (who represent the world
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population) show that the original ancestral trunk divided into two
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branches. Only Africans descended from one branch. The rest of the
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population, as well as some Africans, descended from the other. The
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inference was that the stem was African. In 1991 another analysis of
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exact sequences from 189 people confirmed this and indicated that Eve
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was roughly our ten-thousandth great-grandmother.
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THE FALL OF EVE
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Unfortunately, however, Eve quickly fell down. In 1992 the geneticist
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Alan Templeton of Washington University stated in the journal Science.
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"The inference that the tree of humankind is rooted in Africa is not
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supported by the data."[2] It seems that the African Eve theory evolved
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from errors in computer analysis.
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The ancestral trees had been drawn from mtDNA sequences through what is
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called the principle of parsimony. The figure below gives a rough idea
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of how this was done. To create the figure, I used sequences of four
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letters to stand for the genetic information in mtDNA. In (1) I started
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with abcd as the original ancestor, and by making single changes, or
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mutations, I produced descendants avcd and abud. Then from avcd I got
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two more descendants, avcn and rvcd, again by single mutations.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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avcn rvcd abud avcn rvcd abud
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\ / / \ \ /
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\ / / \ \ /
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\ / / \ \ /
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avcd / \ avud
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\ / \ /
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\ / \ /
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\ / \ /
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(1) abcd (2) avun
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avcn rvcd abud
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\ | /
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\ | /
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\ | /
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\ | /
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\ | /
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\ | /
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(3) rbun
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Examples of evolutionary trees. Tree 1 represents the evolution of a
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gene sequence. Each change from one letter to another represents a
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mutation. Trees 2 and 3 show other possible evolutionary histories
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yielding the same results. Such are the ambiguities involved in figuring
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out evolutionary histories from existing gene sequences. (See text).
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Let's suppose we are given the sequences avcn, rvcd, and abud and we are
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asked to deduce their ancestry. How would we go about this? The method
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used by the scientists studying mtDNA was to say that ancestors and
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descendants should be as similar as possible. One way to measure how
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similar they are is to count the number of mutations from ancestor to
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descendant in the tree of descent. A tree with few mutations shows high
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similarity, so it is a good candidate for the real ancestral tree. Such
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a tree is said to be parsimonious.
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For example, tree (1) has four mutations, and tree (3) has eight.
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Scientists would argue that (1) is therefore more likely to resemble the
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real ancestral tree. This seems promising, since in this case tree (1)
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is in fact the real tree. But tree (2) requires five mutations, and so
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it is nearly as parsimonious. Yet (2) shows a completely different
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pattern of ancestors.
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The problem with the parsimonious tree method is that in a complex case
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there are literally millions of trees that are equally parsimonious.
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Searching through them all on a mainframe computer can take months.
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According to Templeton, the original findings on African Eve came from
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computer runs that missed important trees. When further runs were made,
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a tree with African roots turned out no more likely than one with
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European or Asian roots.
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The parsimonious tree method rests on the idea that similar organisms
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should share close common ancestors, and less similar organisms more
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distant ones. This idea is the central motivating concept behind the
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theory of evolution. Since the span of recorded human history is too
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short to show evolutionary changes that mean very much, evolutionists
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are forced to reconstruct the history of living species by comparing
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likenesses and differences in living and fossil organisms.
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For example, man and ape are said to share a close common ancestor
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because man and ape are very similar. In the late nineteenth century
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there was a famous debate between the anatomists Thomas Huxley and
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Richard Owen over whether or not human beings were cousins of apes. Owen
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maintained that they weren't, because a feature of the human brain, the
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hippocampus major, was not found in the brains of apes. But Huxley won
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the debate by showing that apes really do have a hippocampus major.
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Before triumphantly presenting his evidence for this to the British
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Association of Science, Huxley had written to his wife, "By next Friday
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evening they will all be convinced that they are monkeys."[3]
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WHY MAN AND APE ARE SIMILAR
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Of course, man and ape really are similar. So if they don't descend from
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a close common ancestor, how can one account for this? Biblical
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creationists propose that God created man and ape separately by divine
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decree. To many scientists this story seems unsatisfactory. The
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geneticist Francisco Ayala indicated why in a discussion of the close
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likenesses between human beings and chimpanzees. He remarked, "These
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creationists are implying that God is a cheat, making things look
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identical when they are not. I consider that to be blasphemous."[4] In
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other words, why would God fake a record of apparent historical change?
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To illustrate the idea behind Ayala's comment, consider the legs of
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mammals. In all known land mammals, the leg bones are homologous, or
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similar in form. Thus all mammals have a recognizable thigh bone, shin
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bone, and so on. Now imagine that genetic engineering becomes highly
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perfected. A genetic engineer might want to create an animal with legs
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suitable for a particular environment. But would he do this by simply
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modifying the shapes of the standard mammalian leg bones to make another
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typical mammalian leg? Why not create a whole new set of leg bones
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suitable for the task at hand? And if human engineering might do this,
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why not God? The answer that God's will is inscrutable doesn't sit well
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with many scientists.
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It is certainly not possible to second guess the will of God. But the
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Vedic literature offers an account of the origin of species that
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explains the patterns of similarity among living organisms. According to
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the Srimad Bhagavatam, living beings have descended, with modification,
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from an original created being. All species, therefore, are linked by a
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family tree of ancestors and descendants. Forms sharing similar features
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inherit those features from ancestral forms that had them. So the theory
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given in the Bhagavatam accounts for the likenesses and differences
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between species in a way comparable to that of the theory of evolution.
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But these two theories are not the same. The neo-Darwinian theory of
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evolution says that species descended from primitive one-celled
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organisms and gradually developed into forms more and more complex. In
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contrast, the Bhagavatam says that Brahma, the original created being,
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is superhuman. Brahma generated beings called prajapatis, who are
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inferior to him. These in turn produced generations of lesser beings,
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culminating in plants, animals, and human beings as we know them. From
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the prajapatis on down, these successive generations generally came into
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being by sexual reproduction.
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The theory of evolution says that species have emerged by mutation and
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natural selection, with no intelligent guidance. But the Bhagavatam
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maintains that the entire process of generating species is planned in
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detail by God.
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INTELLIGENT DESIGNER
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This point brings us back to the question why species should be linked
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by patterns of homology.
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Several points can be made. The first is that the genetic engineer
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designing one special-purpose mammal might find it convenient to
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introduce one special design. But if he wanted to create an entire
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ecosystem of interacting organisms, he might want to do it with a
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general scheme in which he could produce different types of organisms by
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modifying standard plans. So a standard mammalian plan could be used as
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the starting point for producing various mammals, and similar plans
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could be used for birds, fish, and so on. It would be most efficient to
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organize these plans into a parsimonious tree to make short the design
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work needed.
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This idea can overcome one of the drawbacks of the theory of evolution.
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Many living organisms have complex structures that evolutionists have a
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hard time accounting for by mutations and natural selection. Observed
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intermediate forms linking organisms that have these structures to those
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that don't are notoriously lacking. Evolutionists have often found it
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hard to imagine convincing possibilities for what these intermediate
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forms might be. But the structures are easy to account for if we posit
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an intelligent designer.
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To illustrate this point, consider the problem of writing computer
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programs. A programmer will often write a new program by taking an old
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one and modifying it. After doing this for a while, he winds up
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producing a family tree of programs. But the changes required to go from
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one program to another are often extensive. They're not the kind you'd
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be likely to get by randomly zapping the first program with mutations
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and waiting to get a new program that operates in the required way.
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The point could be made, however, that a finite human engineer may need
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efficient design methods but God is unlimited and doesn't need them. Why
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then should He use them? We can't second guess God, but a possible
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answer is waiting for us to consider in the Bhagavatam (2.1.36). There
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Krsna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is celebrated as the topmost
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artist:
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Varieties of birds are indications of His masterful artistic
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sense. Manu, the father of mankind, is the emblem of His
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standard intelligence, and humanity is His residence. The
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celestial species of human beings, like the Gandharvas,
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Vidyadharas, Caranas, and Apsaras, all represent His musical
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rhythm, and the demoniac soldiers are representations of His
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wonderful prowess.
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Orderly patterns of design are also natural in artistic works. Just as
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Bach dexterously combines and modifies different themes in his fugues,
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so the Supreme Artist may orchestrate the world of life in a way that
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shows order, parsimony, and luxuriant novelty of form. The patterns of
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parsimonious change follow naturally from the procreation of species.
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The novelty flows from Krsna's creative intelligence and cannot be
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accounted for by neo-Darwinian theory.
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SUBTLE ENERGIES
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This brings us to our last point. The life forms descending from Brahma
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include many species unknown to us. The higher species, beginning with
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Brahma himself, have bodies made mostly of subtle types of energy
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distinct from the energies studied in modern physics. Manu, the
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Gandharvas, and the Vidyadharas are examples of such beings.
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We may speak of the energies studied by modern physics as gross matter.
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The bodies of ordinary beings, animals, and plants are all made of this
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type of matter. If they have descended from beings with bodies made of
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subtle energy, then there must be a process of transformation whereby
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gross forms are generated from subtle. Such a process, the Bhagavatam
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says, does in fact exist.
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So the Bhagavatam's explanation of the origin of species makes the
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following two predictions: (1) There should exist subtly embodied beings
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that include the precursors of grossly embodied organisms, and (2) there
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should be a process of generating gross form from subtle form. It would
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be interesting to see if there is any empirical evidence that might
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corroborate these predictions.
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REFERENCES
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[1] Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allen Wilson, "Mitochondrial DNA
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and Human Evolution," Nature, Vol. 325, January 1, 1987.
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[2] Sharon Begley, "Eve takes another Fall," Newsweek, 3/1/92.
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[3] Wendt, 1972, p. 71.
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[4] Joel Davis, "Blow to Creation Myth," Omni, August, 1980.
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Sadaputa Dasa (Richard L. Thompson) earned his Ph.D. in mathematics from
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Cornell University. He is the author of several books, of which the most
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recent is Vedic Cosmography and Astronomy.
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END OF ARTICLE
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Posted by Kalki Dasa for Back to Godhead
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-------------------------------------------------------
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| Don't forget to chant: Hare Krishna Hare Krishna |
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| Krishna Krishna Hare Hare |
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| Hare Rama Hare Rama |
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| Rama Rama Hare Hare |
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| Kalki's Infoline BBS Aiken, South Carolina, USA |
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| (kalki33!kalki@lakes.trenton.sc.us) |
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