Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
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The Improbability of God
by Richard Dawkins
from Free Inquiry, Volume 18, Number 3.
Richard Dawkins is Oxford's Professor of Public Understanding
of Science. He is the author of The Blind Watchmaker (on
which this article is partly based) and Climbing Mount Improbable.
He is a Senior Editor of Free Inquiry.
Much of what people do is done in the name of God. Irishmen
blow each other up in his name. Arabs blow themselves up
in his name. Imams and ayatollahs oppress women in his name.
Celibate popes and priests mess up people's sex lives in
his name. Jewish shohets cut live animals' throats in his
name. The achievements of religion in past history - bloody
crusades, torturing inquisitions, mass-murdering conquistadors,
culture-destroying missionaries, legally enforced resistance
to each new piece of scientific truth until the last possible
moment - are even more impressive. And what has it all been
in aid of? I believe it is becoming increasingly clear that
the answer is absolutely nothing at all. There is no reason
for believing that any sort of gods exist and quite good
reason for believing that they do not exist and never have.
It has all been a gigantic waste of time and a waste of
life. It would be a joke of cosmic proportions if it weren't
so tragic.
Why
do people believe in God? For most people the answer is
still some version of the ancient Argument from Design.
We look about us at the beauty and intricacy of the world
- at the aerodynamic sweep of a swallow's wing, at the delicacy
of flowers and of the butterflies that fertilize them, through
a microscope at the teeming life in every drop of pond water,
through a telescope at the crown of a giant redwood tree.
We reflect on the electronic complexity and optical perfection
of our own eyes that do the looking. If we have any imagination,
these things drive us to a sense of awe and reverence. Moreover,
we cannot fail to be struck by the obvious resemblance of
living organs to the carefully planned designs of human
engineers. The argument was most famously expressed in the
watchmaker analogy of the eighteenth-century priest William
Paley. Even if you didn't know what a watch was, the obviously
designed character of its cogs and springs and of how they
mesh together for a purpose would force you to conclude
"that the watch must have had a maker: that there must
have existed, at some time, and at some place or other,
an artificer or artificers, who formed it for the purpose
which we find it actually to answer; who comprehended its
construction, and designed its use." If this is true
of a comparatively simple watch, how much the more so is
it true of the eye, ear, kidney, elbow joint, brain? These
beautiful, complex, intricate, and obviously purpose-built
structures must have had their own designer, their own watchmaker
- God.
So
ran Paley's argument, and it is an argument that nearly
all thoughtful and sensitive people discover for themselves
at some stage in their childhood. Throughout most of history
it must have seemed utterly convincing, self-evidently true.
And yet, as the result of one of the most astonishing intellectual
revolutions in history, we now know that it is wrong, or
at least superfluous. We now know that the order and apparent
purposefulness of the living world has come about through
an entirely different process, a process that works without
the need for any designer and one that is a consequence
of basically very simple laws of physics. This is the process
of evolution by natural selection, discovered by Charles
Darwin and, independently, by Alfred Russel Wallace.
What
do all objects that look as if they must have had a designer
have in common? The answer is statistical improbability.
If we find a transparent pebble washed into the shape of
a crude lens by the sea, we do not conclude that it must
have been designed by an optician: the unaided laws of physics
are capable of achieving this result; it is not too improbable
to have just "happened." But if we find an elaborate
compound lens, carefully corrected against spherical and
chromatic aberration, coated against glare, and with "Carl
Zeiss" engraved on the rim, we know that it could not
have just happened by chance. If you take all the atoms
of such a compound lens and throw them together at random
under the jostling influence of the ordinary laws of physics
in nature, it is theoretically possible that, by sheer luck,
the atoms would just happen to fall into the pattern of
a Zeiss compound lens, and even that the atoms round the
rim should happen to fall in such a way that the name Carl
Zeiss is etched out. But the number of other ways in which
the atoms could, with equal likelihood, have fallen, is
so hugely, vastly, immeasurably greater that we can completely
discount the chance hypothesis. Chance is out of the question
as an explanation.
This
is not a circular argument, by the way. It might seem to
be circular because, it could be said, any particular arrangement
of atoms is, with hindsight, very improbable. As has been
said before, when a ball lands on a particular blade of
grass on the golf course, it would be foolish to exclaim:
"Out of all the billions of blades of grass that it
could have fallen on, the ball actually fell on this one.
How amazingly, miraculously improbable!" The fallacy
here, of course, is that the ball had to land somewhere.
We can only stand amazed at the improbability of the actual
event if we specify it a priori: for example, if a blindfolded
man spins himself round on the tee, hits the ball at random,
and achieves a hole in one. That would be truly amazing,
because the target destination of the ball is specified
in advance.
Of
all the trillions of different ways of putting together
the atoms of a telescope, only a minority would actually
work in some useful way. Only a tiny minority would have
Carl Zeiss engraved on them, or, indeed, any recognizable
words of any human language. The same goes for the parts
of a watch: of all the billions of possible ways of putting
them together, only a tiny minority will tell the time or
do anything useful. And of course the same goes, a fortiori,
for the parts of a living body. Of all the trillions of
trillions of ways of putting together the parts of a body,
only an infinitesimal minority would live, seek food, eat,
and reproduce. True, there are many different ways of being
alive - at least ten million different ways if we count
the number of distinct species alive today - but, however
many ways there may be of being alive, it is certain that
there are vastly more ways of being dead!
We
can safely conclude that living bodies are billions of times
too complicated - too statistically improbable - to have
come into being by sheer chance. How, then, did they come
into being? The answer is that chance enters into the story,
but not a single, monolithic act of chance. Instead, a whole
series of tiny chance steps, each one small enough to be
a believable product of its predecessor, occurred one after
the other in sequence. These small steps of chance are caused
by genetic mutations, random changes - mistakes really -
in the genetic material. They give rise to changes in the
existing bodily structure. Most of these changes are deleterious
and lead to death. A minority of them turn out to be slight
improvements, leading to increased survival and reproduction.
By this process of natural selection, those random changes
that turn out to be beneficial eventually spread through
the species and become the norm. The stage is now set for
the next small change in the evolutionary process. After,
say, a thousand of these small changes in series, each change
providing the basis for the next, the end result has become,
by a process of accumulation, far too complex to have come
about in a single act of chance.
For
instance, it is theoretically possible for an eye to spring
into being, in a single lucky step, from nothing: from bare
skin, let's say. It is theoretically possible in the sense
that a recipe could be written out in the form of a large
number of mutations. If all these mutations happened simultaneously,
a complete eye could, indeed, spring from nothing. But although
it is theoretically possible, it is in practice inconceivable.
The quantity of luck involved is much too large. The "correct"
recipe involves changes in a huge number of genes simultaneously.
The correct recipe is one particular combination of changes
out of trillions of equally probable combinations of chances.
We can certainly rule out such a miraculous coincidence.
But it is perfectly plausible that the modern eye could
have sprung from something almost the same as the modern
eye but not quite: a very slightly less elaborate eye. By
the same argument, this slightly less elaborate eye sprang
from a slightly less elaborate eye still, and so on. If
you assume a sufficiently large number of sufficiently small
differences between each evolutionary stage and its predecessor,
you are bound to be able to derive a full, complex, working
eye from bare skin. How many intermediate stages are we
allowed to postulate? That depends on how much time we have
to play with. Has there been enough time for eyes to evolve
by little steps from nothing?
The
fossils tell us that life has been evolving on Earth for
more than 3,000 million years. It is almost impossible for
the human mind to grasp such an immensity of time. We, naturally
and mercifully, tend to see our own expected lifetime as
a fairly long time, but we can't expect to live even one
century. It is 2,000 years since Jesus lived, a time span
long enough to blur the distinction between history and
myth. Can you imagine a million such periods laid end to
end? Suppose we wanted to write the whole history on a single
long scroll. If we crammed all of Common Era history into
one metre of scroll, how long would the pre-Common Era part
of the scroll, back to the start of evolution, be? The answer
is that the pre-Common Era part of the scroll would stretch
from Milan to Moscow. Think of the implications of this
for the quantity of evolutionary change that can be accommodated.
All the domestic breeds of dogs - Pekingeses, poodles, spaniels,
Saint Bernards, and Chihuahuas - have come from wolves in
a time span measured in hundreds or at the most thousands
of years: no more than two meters along the road from Milan
to Moscow. Think of the quantity of change involved in going
from a wolf to a Pekingese; now multiply that quantity of
change by a million. When you look at it like that, it becomes
easy to believe that an eye could have evolved from no eye
by small degrees.
It
remains necessary to satisfy ourselves that every one of
the intermediates on the evolutionary route, say from bare
skin to a modern eye, would have been favored by natural
selection; would have been an improvement over its predecessor
in the sequence or at least would have survived. It is no
good proving to ourselves that there is theoretically a
chain of almost perceptibly different intermediates leading
to an eye if many of those intermediates would have died.
It is sometimes argued that the parts of an eye have to
be all there together or the eye won't work at all. Half
an eye, the argument runs, is no better than no eye at all.
You can't fly with half a wing; you can't hear with half
an ear. Therefore there can't have been a series of step-by-step
intermediates leading up to a modern eye, wing, or ear.
This
type of argument is so naive that one can only wonder at
the subconscious motives for wanting to believe it. It is
obviously not true that half an eye is useless. Cataract
sufferers who have had their lenses surgically removed cannot
see very well without glasses, but they are still much better
off than people with no eyes at all. Without a lens you
can't focus a detailed image, but you can avoid bumping
into obstacles and you could detect the looming shadow of
a predator.
As
for the argument that you can't fly with only half a wing,
it is disproved by large numbers of very successful gliding
animals, including mammals of many different kinds, lizards,
frogs, snakes, and squids. Many different kinds of tree-dwelling
animals have flaps of skin between their joints that really
are fractional wings. If you fall out of a tree, any skin
flap or flattening of the body that increases your surface
area can save your life. And, however small or large your
flaps may be, there must always be a critical height such
that, if you fall from a tree of that height, your life
would have been saved by just a little bit more surface
area. Then, when your descendants have evolved that extra
surface area, their lives would be saved by just a bit more
still if they fell from trees of a slightly greater height.
And so on by insensibly graded steps until, hundreds of
generations later, we arrive at full wings.
Eyes
and wings cannot spring into existence in a single step.
That would be like having the almost infinite luck to hit
upon the combination number that opens a large bank vault.
But if you spun the dials of the lock at random, and every
time you got a little bit closer to the lucky number the
vault door creaked open another chink, you would soon have
the door open! Essentially, that is the secret of how evolution
by natural selection achieves what once seemed impossible.
Things that cannot plausibly be derived from very different
predecessors can plausibly be derived from only slightly
different predecessors. Provided only that there is a sufficiently
long series of such slightly different predecessors, you
can derive anything from anything else.
Evolution,
then, is theoretically capable of doing the job that, once
upon a time, seemed to be the prerogative of God. But is
there any evidence that evolution actually has happened?
The answer is yes; the evidence is overwhelming. Millions
of fossils are found in exactly the places and at exactly
the depths that we should expect if evolution had happened.
Not a single fossil has ever been found in any place where
the evolution theory would not have expected it, although
this could very easily have happened: a fossil mammal in
rocks so old that fishes have not yet arrived, for instance,
would be enough to disprove the evolution theory.
The
patterns of distribution of living animals and plants on
the continents and islands of the world is exactly what
would be expected if they had evolved from common ancestors
by slow, gradual degrees. The patterns of resemblance among
animals and plants is exactly what we should expect if some
were close cousins, and others more distant cousins to each
other. The fact that the genetic code is the same in all
living creatures overwhelmingly suggests that all are descended
from one single ancestor. The evidence for evolution is
so compelling that the only way to save the creation theory
is to assume that God deliberately planted enormous quantities
of evidence to make it look as if evolution had happened.
In other words, the fossils, the geographical distribution
of animals, and so on, are all one gigantic confidence trick.
Does anybody want to worship a God capable of such trickery?
It is surely far more reverent, as well as more scientifically
sensible, to take the evidence at face value. All living
creatures are cousins of one another, descended from one
remote ancestor that lived more than 3,000 million years
ago.
The
Argument from Design, then, has been destroyed as a reason
for believing in a God. Are there any other arguments? Some
people believe in God because of what appears to them to
be an inner revelation. Such revelations are not always
edifying but they undoubtedly feel real to the individual
concerned. Many inhabitants of lunatic asylums have an unshakable
inner faith that they are Napoleon or, indeed, God himself.
There is no doubting the power of such convictions for those
that have them, but this is no reason for the rest of us
to believe them. Indeed, since such beliefs are mutually
contradictory, we can't believe them all.
There
is a little more that needs to be said. Evolution by natural
selection explains a lot, but it couldn't start from nothing.
It couldn't have started until there was some kind of rudimentary
reproduction and heredity. Modern heredity is based on the
DNA code, which is itself too complicated to have sprung
spontaneously into being by a single act of chance. This
seems to mean that there must have been some earlier hereditary
system, now disappeared, which was simple enough to have
arisen by chance and the laws of chemistry and which provided
the medium in which a primitive form of cumulative natural
selection could get started. DNA was a later product of
this earlier cumulative selection. Before this original
kind of natural selection, there was a period when complex
chemical compounds were built up from simpler ones and before
that a period when the chemical elements were built up from
simpler elements, following the well-understood laws of
physics. Before that, everything was ultimately built up
from pure hydrogen in the immediate aftermath of the big
bang, which initiated the universe.
There
is a temptation to argue that, although God may not be needed
to explain the evolution of complex order once the universe,
with its fundamental laws of physics, had begun, we do need
a God to explain the origin of all things. This idea doesn't
leave God with very much to do: just set off the big bang,
then sit back and wait for everything to happen. The physical
chemist Peter Atkins, in his beautifully written book The
Creation, postulates a lazy God who strove to do as little
as possible in order to initiate everything. Atkins explains
how each step in the history of the universe followed, by
simple physical law, from its predecessor. He thus pares
down the amount of work that the lazy creator would need
to do and eventually concludes that he would in fact have
needed to do nothing at all!
The
details of the early phase of the universe belong to the
realm of physics, whereas I am a biologist, more concerned
with the later phases of the evolution of complexity. For
me, the important point is that, even if the physicist needs
to postulate an irreducible minimum that had to be present
in the beginning, in order for the universe to get started,
that irreducible minimum is certainly extremely simple.
By definition, explanations that build on simple premises
are more plausible and more satisfying than explanations
that have to postulate complex and statistically improbable
beginnings. And you can't get much more complex than an
Almighty God!
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