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Quote of the
month:
"The roots of education are
bitter, but the fruit is sweet."
Aristotle
Further readings:
The Complete Idiot's Guide(R) to Evolution, by Leslie Alan Horvitz.
You can't start any more simply that this
Tower of Babel, by Robert T. Pennock. An excellent treatment of the
evolution-creation controversy, with particular reference to the so-called intelligent
design theory.
Web links:
The National
Center for Science Education, the premier organization to learn about evolution and
creationism and help fight the good fight (if you're not sure which one that is, visit
this page!).
Darwin Day
International, the international coordination center for D-Day events.
Darwin Day -
Tennessee, where it all started!

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Massimo's Phenotypic Plasticity:
Beyond Nature and Nurture

Massimo's Phenotypic Evolution
(with Carl Schlichting) |
In 1859 the world got a piece
of shocking news: it seems that not only is the earth not the center of the universe, as
Copernicus and Galilei had amply demonstrated, but that human beings are not the pinnacle
of creation after all. This devastating blow to our self-esteem-the second in three
centuries-was dealt by Charles Darwin, a quiet Englishman who had made his lifelong
activity the understanding of the natural variation of living organisms. As is well known,
the publication of his On the Origin of Species caused quite a stir in academic circles
and among the general public. The first kind of controversy (the scientific one) lasted
only a few decades: by the turn of the 20th century the theory of descent with
modification (as Darwin called it), or evolution (as we now refer to it), was as solidly
established as general relativity or the theory of gases. Not so for the second sort of
controversy: while the general public in most European countries does not consider the
notion that we are closely related to chimps and monkeys particularly outrageous anymore,
a vocal minority in the United States refuses the very idea on ideological grounds: it's
not in the Bible, so it can't be. How can this bizarre state of affairs persist into the
21st century? To a scientist, this seems as incredible as somebody seriously defending the
theory that the earth is flat (which a few people belonging to the Flat Earth Society in
California actually do!). Scientists are not in the business of questioning people's
religious beliefs, but they are also paid to teach the best of what we have good reasons
to think we know, leaving individuals to make decisions on how to reconcile the
discoveries of science with their own religious views.
It is this disconnect-between what scientists accept as established beyond reasonable
doubt and what a sizable portion of the American public believes-that has prompted the
annual celebration of "Darwin Day," which just occurred on February 12 (that is,
on Darwin's-as well as Lincoln's-birthday). Darwin Day is an international effort, mostly
focused on the United States with a few outlets in Canada and Europe, to encourage the
public to learn about evolutionary biology and to prompt scientists to get out of their
ivory towers for at least a few hours and talk to the people who, after all, pay their
salaries and research grants. Surely this sort of communication between experts and lay
people can't be a bad idea.
Darwin Day was actually started in 1996 at the University of Tennessee as the result of
a reaction to the silliness of a bill then being considered by the state legislature and
which would have curtailed the teaching of evolution in Tennessee's public schools. A
group of students and faculty of the then recently created Department of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology was discussing the situation over a beer (at a
several-times-since-defunct brewery on Gay Street in Knoxville, TN) and decided to create
a group whose mission would be to dispel the so many myths and misunderstandings about
evolution and Darwinism that periodically fuel such misguided legislative attempts as the
1996 Tennessee Senate bill n. 3229. (The bill fortunately died in committee, although it
generated enough negative publicity that the BBC did a special show on the controversy).
So was born the Tennessee Darwin Coalition.
Just in case you'd like to start your own Darwin Day for 2003, let me tell you what we
did in Tennessee this year. The events started on February 11 with a workshop for local
junior and high school teachers on how to use evolution as an example of critical
thinking. Imagine! The idea is that it would be much better for students to learn about
the process of science and how certain conclusions (e.g., that we did evolve from a common
ancestor shared with currently living chimps) are actually reached instead of just
learning facts that they have to take on faith. On February 12 there was a whole array of
events, starting with an all-day information booth at the student union where faculty and
graduate students will answer questions about evolution, and continuing with a documentary
festival in which videos were followed by a discussion of the main ideas presented. Darwin
Day 2002 in Tennessee concluded with a special lecture by philosopher Elliott Sober (of
the University of Wisconsin-Madison), who nicely showed why intelligent design theory is
actually no theory at all. Now, you don't have to do all this to have a Darwin Day next
year, but make sure to borrow a biologist or a philosopher from your local college and the
fun is guaranteed.
While it is astounding to see that the state of science education in this country is so
poor that people proudly "reject" well established scientific theories simply
because they don't fit with their preconceptions, there is a bright side to almost
everything, and the evolution-creation controversy is no exception. After my rude
awakening to the realities of creationism when I moved to Tennessee, I started to study
the problem and its roots. In so doing I learned quite a bit about why people believe what
they believe, and what shortcomings of science education are contributing to cause the
problem. The result has been a better awareness of the situation and a renewed willingness
to do something about it (and a new idea or two to try out). The feeling is spreading
throughout the nation: the Society for the Study of Evolution (the premiere professional
society of evolutionary biologists) now has a permanent committee dealing with creationism
and many of its members are starting to wake up from the torpor of their shielded academic
lives to get back into the classrooms and in the public arena.
The reason this is excellent news for everybody, creationists included, is because it
goes far beyond the scope of this particular controversy. It means that scientists-shaken
by attacks on their discipline from as varied sources as the religious right and the
academic left-may be finally starting to realize that they have a moral obligation to come
to the public and explain what they are doing, why and how. This, as the final words of
Casablanca famously went, may be the beginning of a splendid friendship. The result could
be a better informed and critically thinking public, the true guarantors of a democracy.
Next month: "Those who
'understand' Bin Laden"
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© by Massimo Pigliucci, 2002
Many thanks to Melissa
Brenneman and Bob Faulkner for patiently editing and commenting on Rationally Speaking
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