THE NAS'S ERROR IN PORTRAYING COMMON
STRUCTURES
AS EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION
Another phenomenon that
the National Academy of Sciences represents as proof of the theory
of evolution is homology. Homologies are common structures possessed
by different living things. The NAS has taken the similarities in
the skeletons of human beings and such animals as mice and bats as
an example and proposed that "they are best explained by common descent."
(Science and Creationism, p. 14) The NAS repeats the claims
made and examples cited in Darwin's The Origin of Species, but entirely
ignores the discoveries made in the fields of anatomy and biology
since Darwin's day, thus demonstrating that it has remained at the
scientific level of 150 years ago.
Before moving on to the NAS's unscientific claims,
let us first have a quick look at the concept of homology.
Darwin's Homology Error
Richard Milton's book Shattering the
Myths of Darwinism |
In the chapter of The Origin of Species
entitled "Mutual Affinities of Organic Beings: Morphology, Embryology,
Rudimentary Organs," Darwin spoke of similar structures in species
and suggested that this could only be accounted for by his theory
of development from a common ancestor.
Although Darwin and the evolutionists who came after
him maintained that the only explanation for common structures between
living things is evolution from a common ancestor, most scientists
before Darwin agreed that common structures were the work of a common
design.
Darwinists of the past and present regard evolution
from a common ancestor as the cause of homology; at the same time,
they also portray homology as the strongest evidence for descent from
a common ancestor. However, advances in such fields as anatomy, biochemistry,
and microbiology over the last 50 years have shown that homology does
not constitute evidence for the theory of evolution, and that descent
from a common ancestor is not the cause of homology. In his book Shattering
the Myths of Darwinism, the well-known science writer Richard
Milton states that homology had been one of evolutionists' most important
pieces of evidence, but that as science advanced over the course of
the twentieth century, homology came to represent one of the most
important difficulties facing Darwinism:
The NAS suggests that the skeletons
of such living things as human beings and bats are similar
and that this is evidence of evolution. However, this is an
error without scientific foundation. |
In the past hundred
years, biology has undergone successive revolutions-in embryology,
in microbiology, in molecular biology, and in genetics, revolutions
which have laid open on the laboratory bench the most minute detail
of how plants and animals are constructed. If the Darwinian interpretation
of homology is correct, then you would expect to find at the microscopic
level the same homologies that are found at the macroscopic level.
In fact that is not what has been found. 1
This chapter examines the NAS's claims on the subject
of homology and why it represents such a major problem for the theory
of evolution. The questions that will be dealt with in more detail
in the pages which follow are, in summary:
1. Evolutionists both portray homology as proof of
descent from a common ancestor and describe it as descent from a common
ancestor. This is a tautology-in other words, circular reasoning-and
scientifically speaking proves nothing at all.
2. There are also common structures among living
things for which evolutionists do not claim an evolutionary relationship-like
those between marsupial and placental mammals, for example. This means
that the reason for common structures is not a common ancestor.
3. Contrary to what the NAS would have one believe,
the similar structures in many living things are not caused by similar
genes. This shows that they do not have a common evolutionary origin.
4. In living things with homologous organs, the developmental
stages of these organs are very different. This again shows that these
organs do not come from a common ancestor.
Homology as Evidence for Evolution:
An Example of Circular Reasoning

Charles Darwin |
The NAS makes the same mistake as Darwin and suggests
that a common ancestor is the best explanation of the common structures
among living things. In suggesting that descent from a common ancestor
is a certain fact, the NAS is making an assumption, based on a preconception;then
it turns around and says that the only explanation for common structures
is a common ancestor.
Another error which Darwinists make with regard to
homologous organs is hidden in the circular reasoning they employ.
According to Darwin and his loyal followers in the NAS, common structures
are both the result and proof of the theory of evolution. This deficient
logic basically says that the theory of descent from a common ancestor
proves homology, which in turn proves descent from a common ancestor.
In the same way that it is illogical
to claim that all convertible cars were produced in the same
factory, it is also illogical to regard living things with
similar organs and structures as evidence of descent from
a common ancestor. |
This is like saying first: "All red convertibles
resemble each other; this is proof of the existence of a factory that
produces all red convertibles," and then going on to say, "The best
explanation of the fact that all red convertibles resemble each other
is that they were all made in the same factory." There is no proof
of anything here, merely an unproven hypothesis and phenomena interpreted
in the light of that hypothesis.
This circular reasoning seen in many of the theory
of evolution's claims, as with natural selection, is criticized by
many biologists and philosophers. One of these is Ronald Brady, a
professor of philosophy from New Jersey's Ramapo College, who wrote
the following in 1985:
By making our explanation into the definition of the
condition to be explained, we express not scientific hypothesis but
belief. We are so convinced that our explanation is true that we no
longer see any need to distinguish it from the situation we were trying
to explain. Dogmatic endeavors of this kind must eventually leave the
realm of science. 2
Why Common Structures Do Not
Prove A Common Ancestor
The evolutionists' homology thesis rests on the logic
of building an evolutionary relationship between living things with
similar structures. The fact is, however, that species between which
no evolutionary relationship can be constructed also possess very
similar organs. The wing is one example of this. Bats (which are mammals),
birds, and flying insects all have wings. Furthermore, in the past
there were also winged, flying reptiles. However, it is impossible
to construct any evolutionary link or relationship between these four
different groups.
The squid and man are two living things
between which it is impossible to build any evolutionary link.
Despite this, however, their eyes closely resemble one another
in terms of structure and function. This invalidates the evolutionist
claim that "common structures reveal a common ancestor.". |
Another striking example of this phenomenon is the
surprising structural and other similarities in the eyes of living
things. The squid and man, for instance, are very different living
things, between which no evolutionary link can possibly be established.
However, in terms of structure and function their eyes are very similar.
Yet not even evolutionists can claim that man and the squid have a
common ancestor with similar eyes.
In the face of this, evolutionists say that these
are not "homologous" organs (i.e., descended
from a common ancestor), but "analogous"
(very similar despite not having an evolutionary connection).
For instance, the human eye and the squid eye are
analogous organs in their view. However, the question of whether a
given organ will be deemed a homology or an analogy is answered totally
in the light of the theory of evolution's preconceptions. This shows
that there is nothing scientific about the evolutionist claims based
on similarity. Evolutionists interpret discoveries unreservedly according
to their dogma, and refuse to behave objectively.
Yet the interpretation they come up with is a most
inconsistent one. This is because organs they are forced to regard
as "analogous" sometimes resemble each other so closely, despite their
extraordinarily complex structures, that it is quite inconsistent
to maintain that this similarity came about as the result of chance
mutations. If, as evolutionists claim, the squid eye emerged by chance,
how is it that exactly the same coincidences took place in the vertebrate
eye? The well-known evolutionist Frank Salisbury, who pondered this
question long and hard, writes:
The existence of similar wings among
living things that evolutionists themselves admit are not
evolutionarily related represents another dilemma for them.
|
Even something as complex as the eye
has appeared several times; for example, in the squid, the vertebrates,
and the arthropods. It's bad enough accounting for the origin of such
things once, but the thought of producing them
several times according to the modern synthetic theory makes
my head swim.3
According to evolutionist theory, wings emerged four
times, totally independently of one another: in insects, flying reptiles,
birds and flying mammals (bats). This four-fold emergence of the wing,
which cannot be explained by natural selection and mutation mechanisms,
as well as the structural similarities between the various kinds of
wings, represents a major difficulty for evolutionists.
1) The skull of a North American wolf
2) The skull of a Tasmanian wolf
3) A Tasmanian wolf
4) A North American wolf |
One of the most concrete
examples that totally undermines the evolutionist thesis in this area
can be seen in mammals. Modern biologists are agreed that all mammals
are divided into three categories: placentals, marsupials, and monotremes.
Evolutionists assume that this division goes back to the very beginning
and that both categories have a completely independent evolutionary
history. How interesting it is, therefore, that there are almost identical
"pairs" in placentals and marsupials. Wolves, cats, squirrels, ant-eaters,
moles, and mice all have their marsupial counterparts with closely
similar morphologies.4 In other words, according
to the theory of evolution, completely independent mutations must
have twice chanced to produce these living things in exactly the same
way! This represents a terrible dilemma for evolutionists.
One of the fascinating
similarities between the placental and marsupial categories is that
between the North American Wolf and the Tasmanian Wolf. The former
is placental and the latter marsupial. Evolutionary biologists believe
that these two different species have a totally different evolutionary
history.5
(It is assumed that relations between marsupials and placentals
have been severed since the Australian continent and the islands around
it split away from Gondwanaland, the supercontinent that is supposed
to be the originator of Africa, Antarctica, Australia, and South America.)
The interesting thing, however, is that the skeletons of the North
American and Tasmanian wolves are almost identical. Their skulls resemble
each other particularly closely.
Similarities such as these, which evolutionary biologists are unable
to accept as "homologous," show that similar organs are no evidence
of descent from a common ancestor. Even more interesting, the situation
is the exact reverse in some other living things. In other words,
there are living things that possess totally different organs despite
being regarded as close relatives by evolutionists.
For instance, the great majority of species in the crustacean class
have a refracting eye structure. Only two species, the lobster and the
shrimp, have a totally different reflecting, mirrored eye structure.
Common Structures Controlled by Different Genes
According to the claims made by the NAS and evolutionists
on the subject of homology, similar structures and functions in living
things must again be controlled by similar genes. As we know, the
theory of evolution suggests that living things developed by way of
small, random changes in their genes-that is, by mutations. The genetic
structures of living things regarded as close evolutionary relatives
should therefore also be similar. In particular, similar organs should
be controlled by very similar genetic structures. Yet, the fact is
that genetic research has revealed results completely at variance
with this evolutionist thesis.
Similar organs are generally formed by very different
genetic (DNA) codes. In addition, similar genetic codes in the DNA
of different living things relate to very different organs. In the
chapter headed "The Failure of Homology" in his book Evolution: A
Theory in Crisis, the Australian biologist Michael Denton states that
homology does not offer proof of evolution. Denton states that in
order for homology to represent evidence of evolution it needs to
show that similar organs are controlled by similar genes and also
that similar organs undergo a similar embryological process. However,
Denton goes on to say that this is not the case and that homology
represents a failure for the theory of evolution:
Michael Denton's book Evolution: A Theory
in Crisis |
The validity of the
evolutionary interpretation of homology would have been greatly strengthened
if embryological and genetic research could have shown that homologous
structures were specified by homologous genes and followed patterns
of embryological development… But it has become clear that the principle
cannot be extended in this way. Homologous structures
are often specified by non-homologous genetic systems and the concept
of homology can seldom be extended back into embryology.6
Work on unraveling the genetic code revealed
that anatomical and morphological similarities between living
things were non-existent at the genetic level. |
In the same book, Denton summarizes his conclusions:
The evolutionary basis of homology is
perhaps even more severely damaged by the discovery that apparently
homologous structures are specified by quite different genes in different
species.7
In a 1997 article, Richard Milton describes how molecular
biology has shattered evolutionists' hopes regarding homology:
It isn't only embryology that experienced such disappointments.
In the 1950s, when molecular biologists began to decipher the genetic
code, there was a single glittering prize enticing them. When they
found the codes for making proteins out of amino acids, they naturally
assumed that they were on the brink of discovering at the molecular
level the same homologies that had been observed at the macroscopic
level in comparative anatomy.
If the bones of the human arm could
be traced to the wing of the bat and hoof of the horse, then the miraculous
new science of molecular biology would trace the homologies in DNA
codes that expressed these physical characteristics… Yet when biologists
did begin to acquire an understanding of the molecular mechanism of
genetics, they found that apparently homologous
structures in different species are specified by quite different genes.
8
In fact, this was well
known long before. In 1971, the famous evolutionist Gavin de Beer
wrote:
It is now clear that the pride with which
it was assumed that the inheritance of homologous structures from
a common ancestor explained homology was misplaced.9
De
Beer had proven with a number of examples that homologous structures
could emerge from different genes. One of these was the segments in
insects' bodies. The development of these body parts is controlled by
different genes in the fruit fly, the locust, and the wasp. Since it
is accepted that the bodies of all insects are homologous, this shows
that there is no need for homologous features to be controlled by equivalent
genes. Another example is the gene known as "sex-lethal," necessary
for sex determination in the fruit fly. This gene is not required for
the emergence of males and females in other insects. 10
Another matter which
shows that similar organs are not controlled by similar genes is that
a gene is generally responsible for more than one feature of a living
thing. The gene which determines the color of a rat's fur also determines
its dimensions. The gene which determines the color of the fruit fly
Drosophila's eyes also controls the female's sex organ. Nearly
all the genes in higher organisms have more than one function. The
evolutionist biologist Ernst Mayr admits that there are very few or
even no genes controlling only one feature. 11
Denton cites examples
of a pleiotropic gene (having more than one effect) from chickens.
The effects of a rather harmful mutation in a single gene may include
irregular wing development, lack of toes, sparse feathers, and lung
and air-sac deficiencies. The importance of this is that while some
affected features such as wings and feathers are specific to birds,
others, such as the lung, apply to many other vertebrates, including
human beings. Denton stresses "that nonhomologous genes are involved
to some extent in the specifications of homologous structures."12
The exact opposite of this-that is, the emergence
of non-homologous structures from identical genes-is also frequently
encountered. For instance, the gene known as Distal-less
is related to the development of limbs in mice, moths, spiny worms,
velvet worms, and sea urchins, and yet the appendages of these creatures
are all very different. In other words, they are not homologous.
Biologists studying these similarities announced
in 1997 that it was astonishing that the appendages of these animals
should be so different, and that their anatomies and "evolutionary
pasts" must be totally different. In 1999, Professor Gregory Wray
of Duke University's Zoology Department found "surprising" the association
between the gene Distal-less and "what are superficially
similar, but non-homologous structures." Wray's conclusions were;
This association between
a regulatory gene and several non-homologous structures seems to be
the rule rather than the exception. 13
In his book Homology: An Unsolved
Problem, published as far back as 1971, the evolutionary biologist
De Beer put forward a wide-ranging analysis of the subject and summarized
why homology represented a serious difficulty for the theory of evolution:
What mechanism can
it be that results in the production of homologous organs, the same
"patterns," in spite of their not being controlled by the same genes?
I asked this question in 1938, and it has not been answered. 14
The question put by De Beer in 1938, to which he was
unable to find an answer in 1971, is still unanswered today.
Common Structures With Different
Developmental Patterns
Another piece of evidence that undermines the claims
of homology is the question of embryological development. Despite the
fact that the NAS authors insist in the chapter named "Similarities
During Development" that there are similarities between living things
during their development and that this is proof of descent from a common
ancestor (Science and Creationism, p. 17), this claim does
not reflect the true facts.
In order for the evolutionist thesis regarding homology
to be taken seriously, the developmental processes of homologous structures-in
other words the stages of embryological development in the egg and the
mother's womb-need to be parallel. The fact is, however, that these
embryological process for homologous organs are very different in every
living thing. No matter how much evolutionists choose to ignore it,
this truth has been known to scientists since the nineteenth century.
For example, the American embryologist E.B. Wilson wrote in 1894,
It is a familiar fact
that parts which closely agree in the adult, and are undoubtedly homologous,
often differ widely in larval or embryonic origin either in mode of
formation or in position, or in both. 15
Sixty
years after Wilson, De Beer repeated the fact and stated,
The fact is that correspondence
between homologous structures cannot be pressed back to similarity of
position of the cells in the embryo, or of the parts of the egg out
of which the structures are ultimately composed, or of developmental
mechanisms by which they are formed.16
This still applies today. The contemporary
biologist Pere Alberch makes the following analysis:
[It is] the rule rather
than the exception that homologous structures form from distinctly dissimilar
initial states.17
The evolutionary developmental biologist
Rudolf Raff studied two species of sea urchin which had reached almost
identical forms by way of very different paths, and expressed the same
difficulty in 1999:
Homologous features in
two related organisms should arise by similar developmental processes
. . . [but] features that we regard as homologous from morphological
and phylogenetic criteria can arise in different ways in development.
18
The incompatibility between the developmental
pathway of homologous organs also applies to some vertebrate limbs.
Salamanders are one example of this. The development of the digits of
many vertebrate limbs is from the back to the front, i.e., from the
tail to the head. This is the case with frogs, for instance. Yet, the
manner of development of salamanders-which, like frogs, are amphibians-is
very different. In salamanders, the development of digits is in the
exact opposite direction, from the head to the tail.
Another instance of homologous
organs that do not pass through the same embryological stages relates
to the way in which these organs generally start to develop in different
regions of the embryo. Research has shown that similar organs in different
animals begin to be formed by different groups of cells within the embryo.
The development of the alimentary canal is one example of this; this
fundamental structure emerges in very different ways in a great many
different creatures. For example, the alimentary canal in sharks forms
from the roof of the embryonic gut cavity. In the lamprey, an eel-like
fish, however, it forms from the floor of the gut. In frogs, it begins
to form from the floor and roof of the embryo, while in birds and reptiles
it starts in the lower layer of the embryonic disc or blastoderm. 19
Darwin's
classic example of homology was the forelimbs of vertebrates. This, too,
represents a problem for the theory of evolution. This is because the
forelimbs emerge in different body segments in different species. In the
newt, for example, the forelimbs emerge from segments 2, 3, 4, and 5 of
the trunk; in lizards, from segments 6, 7, 8, and 9; and in human beings,
from segments 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18.20 As the molecular
biologist Michael Denton has stated, it could be concluded from this fact
that forelimbs are not homologous. 21
According to Denton,
The development of the
vertebrate kidney appears to provide another challenge to the assumption
that homologous organs are generated from homologous embryonic tissue.
In fish and amphibia the kidney is derived directly from an embryonic
organ known as the mesonephros, while in reptiles and mammals the mesonephros
degenerates towards the end of embryonic life and plays no role in the
formation of the adult kidney, which is formed instead from a discrete
spherical mass of mesodermal tissue, the metanephros, which develops
quite independently from the mesonephros...22
Many frogs begin life as swimming tadpoles,
and turn into frogs during the last stage of metamorphosis.
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The emergence of similar
structures as the result of totally dissimilar processes is frequently
encountered, especially in the later stages of development.
Many animal species undergo a process known as "indirect
development" on the path to adulthood; in other words, they have a larval
stage. For example, many frogs start life as swimming tadpoles and turn
into four-footed animals at the last stage of metamorphosis. There are
also other frog species which bypass the tadpole stage and develop directly.
However, most adults from these directly-developing species are almost
indistinguishable from other frogs that go through the tadpole phase.23
In short, embryological and genetic research
shows that the concept of homology, which Darwin put forward as proof
that living things had developed from a common ancestor, actually represents
no such proof at all. A close study of homology demonstrates that it
is a clearly inconsistent evolutionist error.
After citing examples
from embryology of the dilemma that homology poses for the theory of
evolution, Richard Milton says,
Many other comparable examples can be given from embryology:
in almost every case they have been put into a file drawer labeled "unresolved
problems of homology" and largely forgotten about.24
The way in which the NAS ignores facts known to and accepted
by all scientific circles, and tries to portray discredited evidence for
the theory of evolution as the definitive truth, is really astonishing.
THE NAS'S ERRORS REGARDING REPTILES AND MAMMALS
At
the end of the chapter on "Common Structures" in the NAS book Science
and Creationism, it is stated that "The mammalian ear and jaw are
instances in which paleontology and comparative anatomy combine to show
common ancestry through transitional stages." (Science and Creationism,
p. 15). In essence, the NAS's claim in this chapter is that while the
mammalian lower jaw consists of a single bone, the reptile jaw consists
of three. Evolutionists maintain that that the greater number of bones
in reptiles' ears are homologous to the bones in those of mammals, and
put this forward as evidence that mammals evolved from reptiles. One proof
of this transition, according to evolutionists and the NAS, is the so-called
transitional form Therapsida, a group of mammal-like reptiles
with a double jaw joint.
The above account is a classic evolutionist claim.
If evolutionists see the slightest similarity between two species, they
are not slow to interpret that similarity in terms of evolution. However,
in doing so they ignore all the facts that make their interpretation
impossible.
The alleged evolution of reptiles into mammals is a
matter that contains several major difficulties for evolutionists. The
fact that two mammal bones resemble certain bones in reptiles does not
resolve the issue. Many questions remain unanswered. For example, how
did jaw bones "migrate" to such an irreducibly complex organ as the
ear, as a result of mutations? How did these mutations manage to shrink
the two jaw bones, cause them to have them the ideal shape and dimensions,
and form muscles around them? How did random changes build a perfect
balance in the middle ear? And, finally, how did the animal manage to
hear and eat while all this was going on? All of these questions remain
unanswered. Evolutionists are unable to answer them, because any one
of them is sufficient to undermine the myth of the evolution of reptiles
into mammals.
Fossils of creatures belonging to the order Therapsida
cannot substantiate the evolutionists' claims. First and foremost, therapsid
fossils do not appear in the fossil record in the sequence expected
by Darwinism. For the evolutionists' claims to be true, therapsid fossils
would need to appear in order in the strata from the most reptile-like
to the most mammal-like, with respect to jaw features. Yet, this order
does not appear in the fossil record.
In his book Darwin
On Trial, the famous critic of Darwinism Phillip Johnson makes
this comment on the subject:
An artificial line of descent [between reptiles and
mammals] can be constructed, but only by arbitrarily mixing specimens
from different subgroups, and by arranging them out of their actual
chronological sequence.25
In addition, the ear and jaw bones are the
only common feature between therapsids and mammals. When the enormous
differences between the therapsid and mammalian reproductive
system and other organs are examined, it will be seen how far the question
of the supposed evolution of reptiles into mammals is from being answered.
Taking it still further, matters become even more complicated. For example,
one may ask how mammals-a group that includes a great many different categories,
such as primates, horses, bats, whales, polar bears, squirrels, and ruminants-evolved
from reptiles by means of random mutations and natural selection. (For
more detailed information on evolutionists' dilemmas with regard to the
origin of mammals, see Harun Yahya, Darwinism
Refuted, Goodword Books, 2003.)
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