The incredible is not the impossible

The incredible is not the impossible

Photo by Daniil Kuželev on Unsplash

Originally published 13 June 1994

The human eye is dear to Creationists.

It is so exquis­ite­ly suit­ed for its pur­pose — to pro­vide sharp visu­al images of the out­side world to the brain — that no sequence of ran­dom vari­a­tions act­ing over time would seem suf­fi­cient for its design.

Michael Pit­man, a Cre­ation­ist writer, says: “That such an instru­ment should under­go a suc­ces­sion of blind but lucky acci­dents which by neces­si­ty led to per­fect sight is as cred­i­ble as if all the let­ters of the Ori­gin of Species, being placed in a box, shak­en and poured out, should at last come togeth­er in the order in which they occur in that divert­ing work.”

Like oth­er Cre­ation­ists, Pit­man won­ders how nat­ur­al selec­tion could have favored any­thing less than the present organ. “The eye must be per­fect or near per­fect,” he writes. “Oth­er­wise, it is useless.”

My own eyes are far from per­fect; with­out glass­es I could not read Pit­man’s divert­ing book. Nev­er­the­less, my far­sight­ed eyes are far from use­less. Even the abil­i­ty to vague­ly per­ceive light and dark would be welcome.

The one-celled marine organ­ism Eugle­na has an eye­spot con­tain­ing a few specks of pig­ment by which it ori­ents itself towards light, which it uses to man­u­fac­ture nutri­ents by pho­to­syn­the­sis. Hard­ly a per­fect eye by human stan­dards, but cru­cial to Eugle­na’s sur­vival.

The scal­lop has dozens of eye­spots, each with its own lens and light-sen­si­tive cells. These organs of vision are crude by human stan­dards, but they serve the scal­lop well as it scoots across the ocean floor. A scal­lop with­out eye­spots would be at a con­sid­er­able dis­ad­van­tage in the strug­gle for life.

The vari­ety of eyes in nature is aston­ish­ing. Vir­tu­al­ly every image-form­ing method used by human tech­nol­o­gy has been antic­i­pat­ed by nature — lens­es, mir­rors, pin­hole cam­eras, fiber-optic bun­dles, and super­mar­ket bar-code scanners.

Eyes of one sort or anoth­er have inde­pen­dent­ly evolved at least 40 times dur­ing the his­to­ry of life. Cre­ation­ists are most enam­ored with the eyes of high­er ver­te­brates. The human eye, with its lids, lash­es, adjustable iris, adjustable lens, and 125 mil­lion light- sen­si­tive recep­tors is con­sid­ered by Cre­ation­ists to be the crown­ing touch of Creation.

Anoth­er anti-evo­lu­tion­ist writer, I. L. Cohen, con­cludes of the eye: “The whole sys­tem came into being at pre­cise­ly the same time…It is not pos­si­ble, under any stretch of the imag­i­na­tion, that all these parts of the opti­cal mech­a­nisms could hap­haz­ard­ly become func­tion­al through ran­dom mutations.”

Impos­si­ble? This is the sort of think­ing that biol­o­gist Richard Dawkins calls “The Argu­ment from Per­son­al Increduli­ty”: If it seems impos­si­ble to me, it must be impossible.

A study by evo­lu­tion­ists Dan Nils­son and Susanne Pel­ger in a [1994] issue of Pro­ceed­ings of the Roy­al Soci­ety sug­gests that the evo­lu­tion of the eye by nat­ur­al selec­tion may be even less dif­fi­cult that pre­vi­ous­ly esti­mat­ed by biologists.

Nils­son and Pel­ger set out to mod­el evo­lu­tion of the eye with a com­put­er. They start­ed with some­thing akin to an eye­spot, a flat patch of light-sen­si­tive cells sand­wiched between a trans­par­ent pro­tec­tive lay­er and a lay­er of dark pig­ment. They allowed the “eye­spot” to deform itself at ran­dom, with the require­ment that any change be only one per­cent big­ger or small­er than what went before. They also pro­vid­ed for ran­dom changes in refrac­tive index of the trans­par­ent lay­er (refrac­tion index is a mea­sure of the speed of light in a medi­um). The image qual­i­ty at each step was cal­cu­lat­ed using ele­men­tary optics.

The two researchers made assump­tions about her­i­tabil­i­ty and inten­si­ty of nat­ur­al selec­tion based on research with liv­ing species in the field, choos­ing the most con­ser­v­a­tive num­bers in every case. They then set the pro­gram run­ning and watched the eye evolve.

Here is Richard Dawkins’ descrip­tion: “The results were swift and deci­sive. A tra­jec­to­ry of steadi­ly improv­ing acu­ity led unhesi­tat­ing­ly from the flat begin­ning through a shal­low cup to a steadi­ly deep­en­ing cup. The trans­par­ent lay­er thick­ened to fill the cup and smooth­ly curved its out­er sur­face. And then, almost like a con­jur­ing trick, a por­tion of the trans­par­ent fill­ing con­densed into a local, spher­i­cal sub­re­gion of high­er refrac­tive index.”

In oth­er words, an eye sock­et, a curved reti­na, and a lens appeared on the screen of the computer.

Using the most con­ser­v­a­tive assump­tions about how changes are prop­a­gat­ed through off­spring, the time tak­en to evolve a ver­te­brate eye from a flat patch of light-sen­si­tive skin was 400,000 gen­er­a­tions. That’s half-a-mil­lion years or so for typ­i­cal small ani­mals, a mere blink of the eye in geo­log­i­cal time.

Charles Dar­win him­self expressed occa­sion­al doubts that nat­ur­al selec­tion could have pro­duced the eye, even with mil­lions of years to work in. How­ev­er, as Dawkins sug­gests, per­son­al increduli­ty is not a reli­able guide to truth. What seemed unlike­ly in Dar­win’s time, has been made to seem quite rea­son­able by high speed computers.

How­ev­er, the com­put­er sim­u­la­tion of Nils­son and Pel­ger, and oth­ers like it, will make lit­tle dif­fer­ence to Cre­ation­ists. When one of their argu­ments is under­mined by obser­va­tion or exper­i­ment, they sim­ply move to anoth­er, always lodg­ing their “proofs” in the gaps of science.

It is a risky busi­ness. Gaps have a way of being filled.

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