Showing posts with label watchmaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label watchmaker. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Limits of adaptationism

Yesterday we talked about the "why" of insect antennae. Why ask why?

When biologists ask "why" - they are usually asking for a functional "because." The question could be re-phrased as "what for?" This is a very old approach for understanding how biological things work. It assumes that there's a certain order to things, that organisms are a certain way for a reason. God, in his infinite wisdom, made them that way to be suited to their world.

William Paley talks a lot about this. He's the guy who came up with the watchmaker argument for the existence of God. This argument basically states that a watch is complex and contains a mechanism that works in a intricate way to keep time, so when we see a watch, we get a sense that it has purpose and design and therefore a designer. Living things like animals and plants are likewise complex and work in an intricate way to perform their tasks of survival and reproduction. Ergo, living things have design and have a designer. And it follows that the traits expressed by these living things should have a purpose in that design.

But what about traits of living things that seem to have no function? Are they just fanciful inventions of a whimsical God? Whimsy is not something I typically attribute to God. So perhaps there are other explanations. For the next several days we'll examine the limits of adaptationism - why we cannot always ask why and get a straight answer in biology.