THE NAS'S ERRORS IN THE CHAPTER ON
CREATIONISM
AND THE EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
Why The Geological Column Is Not Evidence
for Evolution
Since the NAS authors are blindly devoted
to the theory of evolution, they are even capable of interpreting
evidence that works against the theory as evidence in favor of it.
One example of this is their interpretation of the fossil record:
according to the NAS, fossils are found in an orderly sequence in
the Earth, and similar species are set out in consecutive layers.
Evolutionists then portray this as evidence of evolution. However,
this claim is exceedingly deceptive and totally ignores the real message
of the fossil record.
It first needs to be made clear that
even if living things were set out in order in the Earth's geological
strata, this would still not be proof of evolution. In order for such
an arrangement to be considered evidence of evolution, fossils of
those creatures that provided transitions between species alleged
to have evolved from one another should also be found in the strata.
As we have seen in earlier chapters, however, these transitional forms
are nowhere to be found. Furthermore, beyond the fossil record, branches
of sciences such as morphology, genetics, and biochemistry have all
proven that such transitional forms are impossible. These branches
of science have demonstrated that living species cannot descend from
one another by evolution. In conclusion, even if there were a fossil
sequence in the Earth, as evolutionists claim, this would not constitute
proof of evolution.
The most important aspect of this is,
without a doubt, the fact that the evolutionary history referred to
by the NAS does not exist. The Cambrian explosion, which is known
to have taken place some 550 million years ago, is a clear indication
that life on Earth did not come about through evolutionary development,
but rather emerged suddenly with all its complex forms of life already
in existence. The NAS authors fail to make a single reference drawing
attention to the Cambrian explosion. Yet this booklet claims to be
a response to the proponents of creationism. The Cambrian explosion
heads the list of subjects of interest to the proponents of creation,
and is one of the most important dilemmas facing the theory of evolution.
All the animal
phyla known today emerged at the same time, in the geological age
known as the Cambrian Period. This lasted some 65 million years
and took place some 570 to 505 million years ago.
The "Cambrian explosion"
refers to a shorter time within the Cambrian period, when the main
animal groups suddenly emerged. In an article from 2001, based on
a detailed examination of the literature, Stephen C. Meyer, P.A. Nelson,
and Paul Chien wrote, "Cambrian explosion occurred within an exceedingly
narrow window of geologic time, lasting no more than 5 million years."1
In the fossil record
before that period, there is no trace of life other than single-celled
creatures and a few very simple multi-celled ones. Yet, all the animal
phyla emerged suddenly, fully formed, in a period as short as 5 million
years (which is very short in geological terms)! An article published
in Science in 2001 said: "The beginning of the Cambrian period, some
545 million years ago, saw the sudden appearance in the fossil record
of almost all the main types of animals (phyla) that still dominate
the biota today."2 The same article also stated that
in order for such complex and very different forms of life to be accounted
for in terms of the theory of evolution, fossil beds showing a rich
and gradual development from earlier periods should be found, but
that this is out of the question:
Other paleontologists
have questioned whether such rapid evolution is possible and have
instead postulated a phylogenetic "fuse"-an extended period of evolutionary
genesis that has left little or no fossil record. 3
The fossils found in Cambrian beds belong
to such very different creatures as snails, trilobites, sponges, worms,
star fishes, sea urchins, and sea lilies. Most of the living things
in these strata possess complex systems such as eyes, respiratory
and circulatory systems, and other advanced physiological structures
no different from those of modern specimens. These structures are
both very complex and very different from each other. They all emerged
suddenly, with no evolutionary ancestors.
The only modern phylum whose origins
in the Cambrian Period have ever been in doubt is Chordata, which
includes vertebrates. However, two fossil fish found in 1999 demolished
the evolution hypothesis with respect to chordates, as well. These
fish, known as Haikouichthys ercaicunensis and Myllokunmingia fengjiaoa,
belong to the Cambrian Period and are 530 million years old. A report
by the well-known paleontologist Richard Monastersky, called "Waking
Up to the Dawn of Vertebrates," described the importance of the discovery:
Paleontologists have
long regarded vertebrates as latecomers who straggled into evolutionary
history after much of the initial sound and fury had fizzled. Chinese
paleontologists, however, have discovered fossils
of two fish that push the origin of vertebrates back to the riotous
biological bash when almost all other animal groups emerged in the
geologic record. Preserved in 530-million-year-old rocks from
Yunnan province, the paper clip-size impressions record the earliest
known fish, which predate the next-oldest vertebrates by at least
30 million years.4
This evidence that vertebrates also emerged
during the Cambrian Period demolished all hopes of locating the history
of life within an evolutionary framework.
Professor Phillip Johnson of University
of California at Berkeley, one of the most important critics of evolution
in the world, describes how this fact openly conflicts with Darwinism:
Darwinian theory predicts
a "cone of increasing diversity," as the first living organism, or
first animal species, gradually and continually diversifies to create
the various levels of the taxonomic order. The animal fossil record
more resembles such a cone turned upside down, with the
phyla present at the start and thereafter decreasing.5
As Johnson makes clear, far from emerging
gradually, all the phyla emerged suddenly, with some becoming extinct
in later periods.
It is therefore possible
to understand why the NAS authors failed to mention the Cambrian explosion,
described by Roger Lewin as "the most important evolutionary event during
the entire history of the Metazoa" 6 -neither the NAS
authors nor any other evolutionist dares say anything about the Cambrian
explosion. Therefore, they choose to ignore the phenomenon, as well
as all the other evidence that undermines the theory of evolution.
The Missing Argument: "No One Has Seen
Evolution Occur"
Had evolution really taken place, transitional
forms such as half-reptile/half-mammals and half-reptile/half-birds,
similar to those in these pictures, should be found in the fossil
record. Yet, no trace of such forms has been found. |
The NAS authors suggest that one of the
creationists' main theses is that "no one has seen evolution occur."
In fact, however, this is not a creationist thesis, and can only be
a claim put forward by a few individuals. We do not claim that "the
theory of evolution is not true because no one has seen evolution
occur." As the NAS authors make clear, there is no need for evolution
to be witnessed in order for the theory of evolution to be proven;
if the theory of evolution is true, all that is needed is for its
results or mechanisms to be observed. If evolution did take place,
then we should find ample evidence of this fact. For example, transitional
forms should be discovered in the fossil record that prove that living
things descended from one another. Genetic analyses should show that
the structures of living things claimed to have an evolutionary family
relationship are similar to one another and different from other species.
Family trees built on the basis of genetic and morphological similarities
should be mutually consistent. The way in which complex structures
came into being through chance mechanisms should be capable of explanation.
And the increases in genetic information in living things caused by
mutation should be observed in laboratory experiments.
As we have seen throughout this book, however,
the fact is that neither natural history, nor branches of science such
as biology, morphology, paleontology, microbiology, biochemistry, and
genetics, provide any results suggesting that evolution ever took place.
On the contrary, the results from all these branches of science offer
evidence that living things are individually created. In conclusion,
although it is impossible for us to observe creation, the information
from all the research and experiments in these branches clearly indicate
that living things are created.
"Evolution in Action": Just In the Minds
of Its Supporters
The NAS authors cite several examples
of evolution occurring every day: bacterial resistance to antibiotics,
the resistance of mosquitoes to insecticides, and the resistance of
malaria parasites to drugs (Science and Creationism, p. 21).
We have already discussed the fact that
the gradual acquisition by bacteria of resistance to antibiotics has
nothing to do with evolution, and we shall not repeat this material
here. In the same way, the acquisition by mosquitoes of resistance to
pesticides is also not evidence of evolution.
Why immunity to DDT is not evidence for
evolution
Evolutionists often attempt to portray
the way in which mosquitoes and other insects acquire resistance to
pesticides such as DDT as evidence in favor of the theory of evolution;
however, the truth is very different. It is a mutation that makes
insects resistant to pesticides. This mutation, however, does not
constitute evidence for the theory of evolution.
Before examining this,
let us briefly summarize the effect of DDT on insects. A DDT molecule
attaches itself to a specific matching site on the membrane of the
insect's nerve cells. It thus prevents the nerve from functioning
properly. When sufficient DDT molecules attach themselves to the nerve
cells, the nervous system collapses and the insect dies. 7
So, how does an insect
acquire resistance to DDT? By losing its sensitivity to DDT. This
loss is the result of a mutation that alters the area in the nerve
cell to which the DDT molecule normally attaches itself.8
Any mutation that prevents DDT from attaching to the nerve cell will
make the insect resistant to the poison. Just as in the case of bacteria,
insects can also gain resistance if the functioning of a nerve cell
protein is reduced in just the right way.
 |
Evolutionists portray the acquisition
by insects of resistance by means of mutation as evidence for the
theory of evolution. Yet, they forget-or deliberately ignore-one very
important point: the alteration of an amino acid within a protein
usually affects the functioning of that protein. Although such a change
in a protein may bring resistance to poisons such as DDT, it may also
lead to the loss of other functions or features. Naturally, as long
as the pesticide in question is around, the creature gains resistance
and survives, albeit at the cost of being less well adapted in some
other way. When the poison is removed, however, the non-resistant
species is again at an advantage.
M.W. Rowland from the
Rothamsted Experimental Station in England reported that mosquitoes
made resistant to dieldrin became less active and slower to respond
to stimuli than other insects.9 The resistance of
insects to the poison was acquired at the cost of a "sluggish" nervous
system. The loss of information at the molecular level emerges as
a loss in the insects' performance.
Therefore, it is erroneous to regard the
mutations that bring about resistance to pesticides as an example of
evolution. Such resistance mechanisms stop the poison or antibiotic
from working by causing damage to the structure of the insect or bacterium.
This may bring about resistance, but it cannot increase the insect's
or bacterium's genetic information. On the contrary, in all observed
cases a loss of one sort or another has always been identified. There
is, therefore, no evolution here. The resistance of bacteria to antibiotics
and of insects to DDT does not constitute evidence of evolution.
A Problem Too Complex for NAS: Irreducible
Complexity
According to NAS, the reason why the hemoglobin
of jawed fish is more complex than that of jawless fish is that
the former evolved from the latter. The fact is, however, that
there is no scientific evidence to support this claim. |
The "irreducible complexity" of structures
and systems in living things is one of the most serious dilemmas facing
the theory of evolution. According to the theory, all the stages undergone
as one living thing evolves into another need to be advantageous.
To put it another way, in a process of evolution from A to Z, all
the intermediate stages, B,C,D … W,X,Y, must be of some benefit. Since
it is impossible for natural selection and mutation to consciously
identify an objective in advance, the theory depends on the assumption
that all the systems in living things can be "reduced" to myriad small
steps, and that each individual transition from one step to another
is beneficial to the organism.
That is why Darwin
said, "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed,
which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive,
slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."10
Darwin may have imagined, in the primitive
state of science in the nineteenth century, that living things did
possess a reducible structure. Scientific discoveries during the course
of the twentieth century, however, have revealed that many organs
and systems in living things cannot be reduced to simple forms. This
fact, known as "irreducible complexity," destroys Darwinism, just
as Darwin himself feared.
Although the concept of irreducible complexity
is sufficient to demolish the theory of evolution all on its own,
the NAS authors do devote some space to it. However, they do so only
to suggest, in a manner devoid of any proof or logic, that irreducibly
complex structures are really nothing of the sort:

1) Alpha chain
2) Iron
3) Heme group
4) Beta chain
5) Helix shape of the polypeptide molecule
6) Alpha chain
7) Beta chain
8) Red blood cell |
However, structures and processes that
are claimed to be "irreducibly" complex typically are not on closer
inspection. For example, it is incorrect to assume that a complex
structure or biochemical process can function only if all its components
are present and functioning as we see them today. Complex biochemical
systems can be built up from simpler systems through natural selection.
(Science and Creationism, p. 22)
The NAS authors cite the hemoglobin molecule
as an example of their claim. According to the NAS claim, jawed fish
evolved from jawless ones. The hemoglobin of the former is more complex
than that of the latter. In other words, according to the NAS, the
irreducibly complex hemoglobin of a jawed fish evolved from the hemoglobin
in a simpler animal. With this claim, the NAS imagines it has explained
how an irreducibly complex molecule came into being!
This is pure fantasy, since nothing has
been said that might benefit the theory of evolution. In attempting
to explain the origin of irreducibly complex structures, the NAS authors
rely not on a concrete scientific truth but on the assumptions of
the theory of evolution. The evolution of jawed fish from jawless
fish is a Darwinist assumption, not a scientific fact. Offering one
assumption, itself lacking any proof, as evidence for another is at
best a logical fallacy and at worst an outright deception. But this
is precisely what the claim that "irreducibly complex organs can actually
be reduced" amounts to!
It is also erroneous to portray the degree
of complexity among the hemoglobin molecules in different living things
as evidence for evolution. This is because what evolutionists need
to do is not just to determine the degree of complexity between two
different hemoglobin molecules, but rather to explain how hemoglobin
(and all other proteins) came into being in the first place.
By claiming that a simple hemoglobin
molecule turned into a more complex one, the NAS authors may imagine
that they have accounted for the origin of an irreducibly complex
molecule; however, they overlook (or else choose to ignore) the fact
that the hemoglobin they refer to as "simpler"
itself has an irreducibly complex structure.
 |
The way the NAS authors seek to avoid
the problem of irreducible complexity is by dreaming up a series of
"primitive" intermediate stages for these complex structures. They
write that "Natural selection can bring together parts of a system
for one function at one time and then, at a later time, recombine
those parts with other systems of components to produce a system that
has a different function." (Science and Creationism, p. 22)
Fine, but what are these different functions? That is the real question,
and it is one to which the NAS authors have no answer and for which
they are unable to offer any evidence or examples. What they need
to do is to give an example of a structure or organ acquiring functions
while changing from a simpler to a more complex form, and to back
this up with evidence. Moreover, it is also apparent that if these
intermediate functions are also complex, they will still be left facing
the same difficulty.
In addition, the NAS authors also refer
to natural selection as if it were a conscious force. They speak of
it as though it already knew what the future desired function was
and as though it always produced a useful function by gradually adding
the appropriate components together. In point of fact, however, natural
selection is an unconscious natural mechanism and cannot act according
to any plan.
What is the origin of the particular
organs and systems in living things? How did new genetic information
to describe them come about? Like all evolutionists, the NAS authors
have not the slightest idea. As we saw in earlier chapters, mutations
cannot acquire beneficial characteristics for living things. So, how
are the new functions they hope will be chosen by natural selection
acquired? That vital question goes unanswered. The world's most prominent
evolutionists merely say, "Natural selection does this," without offering
any evidence, believing that they have thus put forward an evolutionary
explanation of the irreducible complexity in the structures and systems
in living things.
For example, the NAS evolutionist authors
attempt to explain the complicated biochemical processes that take
place during blood clotting in terms of genes' being duplicated and
altered, and their effects amplified by natural selection. Gene copying
is one answer that the NAS authors give to the question of how genetic
information can be added to a living thing. According to this account,
a living thing makes more than one copy of its genes. A mutation then
takes place in that extra copy and a change thus takes place in the
living thing's genetic information. Since this change occurs in the
duplicate gene, it does not affect the organism, and thus the functioning
of the gene is not impaired. The mutated gene is a copy.
Unfortunately, however, the gene duplication
explanation contributes nothing to the theory of evolution. This is
because the right gene needs to duplicate for no reason at exactly
the right time (in other words just when the organism requires a new
function). Then, this gene copy needs to undergo a precisely appropriate
mutation, which adds a new function to the organism.
To
believe that so many coincidences can happen one after the other,
and to imagine that this gave rise to the millions of different species
in the world, is quite irrational. Genes duplicate very seldom. The
researchers M. Lynch and J. S. Conery from the University of Oregon
have stated that gene duplication takes place on average once every
100 million years.11 Furthermore, the great majority
of duplicated genes have been found to disappear within a few million
years.12 If we consider that the most obvious characteristic
of structures with irreducible complexity is that they consist of
several components, then it can be seen just how impossible it is
for a gene to bring together the right components at exactly the right
time by duplication.
In fact, even evolutionists greet the
claim that gene duplication gave rise to evolution with suspicion.
Lynch and Conery, for instance, state that the mechanisms that allow
gene duplication to contribute to evolution are unclear:
However, it is unclear
how duplicate genes successfully navigate an evolutionary trajectory
from an initial state of complete redundancy, wherein one copy is
likely to be expendable, to a stable situation in which both copies
are maintained by natural selection. Nor is it clear how often these
events occur. 13
The impossibility of the mechanisms favored
by the NAS as gradually giving rise to evolution is evident. Moreover,
the NAS authors, who claim that the blood clotting process may have
gradually evolved by means of these mechanisms, need to prove these
claims in some detail. For example, they should address such questions
as "which genes underwent what kind of change, when, and how?," or
"what feature or function did this change bring about that was advantageous
to the organism, without causing collateral damage?" A diagram of
the blood clotting process can be seen in the figure on page 240.
It is clear from this diagram that the chance mechanisms of evolution
cannot possibly answer the question of how such a system came into
being, and that evolutionist accounts are nothing more than baseless
demagogy.
Finally, the NAS booklet considers the
irreducible complexity in the structure of the eye. The error of logic
made regarding hemoglobin is repeated here, where it is suggested
that the complex eye evolved from a simpler one. The fact is, however,
that every eye, no matter what its level of complexity, still possesses
irreducible complexity. The NAS authors claim that the complex eye
gradually formed from a single, very simple, light-sensitive spot,
saying "The steps proceed from a simple eye spot made up of light-sensitive
retinula cells (as is now found in the flatworm)..." (Science
and Creationism, p. 22) The point that needs to be considered
here, though, is how simple-or rather how complex-the spot referred
to by the NAS authors actually is.
 |
In order for "sight," even in its simplest
form, to emerge, certain cells in an organism need to become sensitive
to light and to possess the ability to transform that sensitivity
into electrical signals. Then, a special nerve network is needed to
transfer these signals from the light-sensitive cells to the brain,
as well as a visual centre in the brain to analyze that information.
It is irrational to suggest that all this could happen by chance,
all at once and all in the same creature. In his book Evrim Kurami
ve Bagnazlik (The Theory of Evolution and Bigotry), written with the
aim of defending the theory of evolution, the Turkish evolutionist
author Cemal Yildirim accepts this fact in these words:
In order to see, there
is a need for a large number of mechanisms to cooperate: we may speak
of links between the eye and its internal mechanisms and between the
eye and the special center in the brain. How did this complex structure
come about? According to biologists, during the process of evolution
the first step in the formation of the eye was taken with the formation
of a small, light-sensitive region in the skins of certain primitive
creatures. However, what evolutionary advantage
could such a small occurrence bestow on an organism all by itself?
Together with that region, a nerve network connecting it to a visual
centre in the brain would also need to be constructed. Unless these
rather complex mechanisms are linked together, we cannot expect the
phenomenon we know as "sight" to emerge. Darwin believed that variations
emerged at random. If that were so, would it not be a mysterious puzzle
how the great number of variations necessary for sight all came together
and cooperated at the same time in various different parts of the
organism's body? ... The fact is that a string of complementary changes-all
of which must work together-are necessary for sight ... Some molluscs'
eyes have retina, cornea, and a lens just like ours. How can we account
for this construction in two species on such very different evolutionary
levels solely in terms of natural selection? … It is a matter for
debate whether Darwinists can supply a satisfactory answer to that
question…14
Another point which makes that question
even more of a dilemma for evolutionists is the eye of the trilobite,
one of those creatures which suddenly emerged during the Cambrian
explosion. This 530-million-year-old compound eye structure is an
"optical marvel" which functions with a double lens system, and is
the oldest known eye. This totally undermines the evolutionists' claim
that "complex eyes evolved from primitive eyes."
This question poses such a severe problem
for the theory of evolution that the more detailed the analysis, the
more intractible the problem becomes. One important "detail" that needs
to be examined at this point is the tale of the "cell becoming sensitive
to light." What kind of design does this structure-which Darwin and
other evolutionists have glossed over by saying, "sight may have begun
by a single cell becoming light-sensitive"-actually have?
BLOOD CLOTTING: AN IRREDUCIBLY COMPLEX
SYSTEM
You know that when you cut yourself,
or when an old injury starts bleeding, the bleeding will eventually
stop. A scab will form over the injury and the wound will heal. This
may seem very simple and normal. Yet, biochemical research has revealed
that this is the result of the working of an extremely complex system.
(Michael Behe, Darwin's Black Box, New York: Free Press,
pp. 79-97) Damage to, or the absence of, just one of the components
of this system will cause it to stop functioning.
The blood must clot at the right time
and in the right place, and the clotting must stop once normal conditions
have returned. The system must work flawlessly right down to the very
tiniest detail.
In the event of bleeding, clotting needs
to take place at once if the creature is not to die from loss of blood.
It is also essential that the clotting take place all over the wound
and, most important of all, that it should only take place at the
site of the injury. Otherwise, all the creature's blood will clot
and solidify, which will kill it. Blood clotting, therefore, has to
be kept under careful control, and has to occur at the right time
and place.
The blood platelets or thrombocytes,
particles produced by the bone marrow, possess an indispensable property.
These particles are the main components of clotting. A protein known
as von Willebrand factor ensures that the thrombocytes which keep
moving around in the blood do not go past the wound. The thrombocytes
become caught at the injury site, and release a substance that brings
others to the same location. Working together, these cells eventually
close up the wound. Then, the thrombocytes die, after having served
their purpose. The way they sacrifice themselves is just one part
of the blood clotting system.
Whenever bleeding takes place anywhere
in the body, all the proteins responsible for halting that bleeding
immediately travel to the injured tissue. Clotting, which takes
place with the cooperation of a great many proteins, is an irreducibly
complex process that cannot be explained by evolution. |
Another protein that brings about blood
clotting is thrombin. This substance is only produced where there
is an open wound. There must be neither too much nor too little produced.
Moreover, production must occur and stop at just the right times.
So far, more than 20 bodily chemicals have been identified as playing
a role in the production of thrombin. These enzymes can trigger its
reproduction or halt it. The system is so controlled that thrombin
only forms when there is injury to tissue. As soon as all the enzymes
needed for blood clotting have arrived, thrombin trims some protein
chains in fibrinogen. The trimmed protein, now called fibrin, soon
form a network. This network covers the area where the blood is flowing
out. The thrombocytes in the blood also attach themselves to this
network. As this accumulation grows thicker, it stops the flow of
blood by acting as a plug. What we know as a blood clot is the plug
formed by this accumulation.
When the wound is completely healed,
the clot falls apart.
This system-which brings about the formation
of a blood clot, and either strengthens or removes it, as necessary-possesses
the feature of irreducible complexity. The clotting of the blood emerges
from a chain of events in which one component spurs another into action.
A diagram setting out the process appears on page 240. It can be seen
at a glance just what a complex process is involved. The system works
flawlessly, right down to the smallest detail.
What would happen if even the smallest
thing were to go wrong in this magnificently functioning system-if,
say, there was blood clotting in the absence of any wound, or if the
scab forming over the wound came off too easily? There is only one
answer to these questions. In such an event, the bloodstream to such
essential organs as the heart, liver, or brain would be clogged with
clots. That, in turn, would inevitably end in death.
Once again, this shows us that the human
body has been flawlessly designed. It is impossible to account for
even the blood clotting system in terms of chance and the theory of
evolution's notion of "gradual development." This system, every detail
of which is the product of a separate plan and calculation, reveals
the perfection of creation. Our Lord Who creates us has created our
bodies with this system, which protects us throughout the course of
our lives from injuries great and small.
Blood clotting is important not just
for visible cuts, but also for the repair of ruptured blood vessels,
something which happens in our bodies every day. Although you are
not aware of it, you constantly experience tiny hemorrhages throughout
the course of the day. When you knock your arm against the door frame
or sit down hard on a chair, hundreds of tiny blood vessels rupture.
The hemorrhaging that occurs as a result of these blows is immediately
halted thanks to the coagulation system, and the body later goes on
to repair the ruptured blood vessels. If the blow is quite violent,
the hemorrhaging that occurs before clotting sets in is rather more
violent-which is the reason "bruising" occurs. An individual who lacks
this clotting system in the blood will need to be protected from the
slightest blow throughout his life, and even wrapped up in cotton
wool. Hemophiliacs, who do lack just this system, spend their lives
in this very manner. Seriously afflicted individuals tend not to live
long. Internal bleeding caused by something as slight as tripping
while walking can be enough to kill them. In the face of this, everyone
should stop to consider the miracle of creation within his own body
and give thanks to God Who has created that body so flawlessly. This
body, of which we are unable to create a single system or even a single
cell, is a blessing from God. As God states in one verse:
We created you so why do you not
confirm the truth? (Qur'an, 56: 57)
THE CLOTTING MECHANISM
The diagram below shows the blood clotting mechanism. Clotting
comes about as a result of a great many chemical substances taking
their place in a specific order. A similarly complex procedure
occurs in order to bring the clotting process to a halt.
Black |
Black Arrow |
Proteins that are involved
in promoting clot formation |
Red |
Red arrow |
Proteins that
are involved in the prevention, localization, or removal
of blood clots |
|
THE COMPLEX SYSTEM OF SIGHT
How does the system of sight, which the
NAS evolutionists gloss over as being a simple structure, work? How
do the cells in the retina perceive the light particles that fall
on them?
The answer to this question is rather
complicated. When photons strike the cells in the retina, they activate
a chain reaction, rather like a domino effect. The first of these
dominoes is a molecule called "11-cis-retinal," which is sensitive
to photons. The moment a photon strikes it, the 11-cis-retinal molecule
changes shape. This change also alters the form of the protein "rhodopsin,"
which is linked to 11-cis-retinal. In this way, rhodopsin becomes
able to bind to another protein called "transducin."
Before reacting with rhodopsin, transducin
is attached to another molecule called GDP. When it binds to rhodopsin,
it releases GDP and attaches to another molecule called GTP. Two proteins
(rhodopsin and transducin) and one phosphate molecule (GTP) are now
attached to one another. This entire structure is known as "GTP-transducinrhodopsin."
Yet, the process has barely begun. The new compound GTP-transducinrhodopsin
is now compatible with yet another protein, called "phosphodiesterase,"
which is already in the cell. This connection is immediately made.
As a result of this, the phosphodiesterase protein acquires the ability
to split a molecule called cGMP, which is again already in the cell.
Since this process is carried out by not just a few, but by millions
of proteins, the level of cGMP in the cell falls rapidly.
|
1)
iris
2) lens
3) cornea
4) Suspensory ligaments
5) Ciliary body
6) Vitreous humor
7) Retinal blood vessels
8) Optic nerve
9) Retina
10) Choroid
11) Sclera
12) Layers of the retina:
13) Pigmented tissue
14) Rod cell
15) Cone cell
16) Horizontal cell
17) Bipolar cell
18) Amacrine cell
19) Ganglion cell
20) Fibers to optic nerve
21) Light passing through the eye must pass through several
layers of retinal cells before reaching the light-sensing rods
and cones.
22) RETINA
23) Light
24) LIGHT RECEPTORS
25) Pigment containing segments
26) Nucleus
27) Cone Cell
28) Rod Cell
|
What has all this to do with sight? In
order to find the answer to this question, let us have a look at the
final stage of this interesting chemical reaction. The drop in the
density of cGMP within the cell affects the "ion channels" in the
cell. These are proteins that regulate the number of sodium ions in
the cell. Normally, the ion channel allows sodium ions to flow into
the cell from outside, while another molecule expels the unnecessary
ions, thus creating a balance. When the number of cGMP molecules falls,
so does the number of sodium ions. This quantitative change gives
rise to an electrical imbalance in the cell. This electrical imbalance
affects the nerves connected to the cell, and what we call an "electrical
impulse" forms. The nerves forward these signals to the brain, where
what we refer to as "sight" is experienced.1
 |
In short, a single photon strikes just
one of the cells in the retina, and thanks to the ensuing chain reaction,
the cell is enabled to produce an electrical impulse. This varies
according to the energy of the photon, giving rise to the concept
of "strong" and "weak" light. One of the most interesting aspects
of this whole process is the fact that all of the complex reactions
described above take place in one-thousandth of a second, at most.
Even more interesting is the fact that when this chain reaction is
completed, certain special proteins within the retinal cell including
11-cis-retinal, rhodopsin, and transducin-return to their previous
states. Thus, as the eye is struck by new photons every moment, the
chain reaction system within the cells of the retina enables the person
to perceive every one of these photons.
The process of seeing that we have summarized
here actually contains a great many more complex details. Yet, even
this crude picture is enough to show what a magnificent system we
are dealing with. The eye is such a complex, such a finely tuned system
that it is totally irrational to maintain that it could have come
about by chance. The system possesses a complex structure that is
completely irreducible. The absence of even a single one of the huge
number of molecules that enter into chain reactions with one another
would mean the utter failure of the whole system.
The lethal blow that this system deals
to the Darwinist explanation of life as something random is obvious.
Michael Behe makes this comment on the chemistry of the eye and the
theory of evolution:
Now that the black box of vision has
been opened, it is no longer enough for an evolutionary
explanation of that power to consider only the anatomical structures
of whole eyes, as Darwin did in the nineteenth century (and
as popularizes of evolution continue to do today). Each of the anatomical
steps and structures that Darwin thought were so simple actually involves
staggeringly complicated biochemical processes that cannot be papered
over with rhetoric.2
The irreducibly complex structure of
the eye causes the Darwinist theory to "absolutely break down,"3
as Darwin himself put it. It also demonstrates conclusively that life
is created with a most superior design.
1. Michael J. Behe, Darwin's Black
Box, The Free Press, New York, 1996, pp. 18-21.
2. Michael J. Behe, Darwin's Black Box, The Free Press, New York,
1996, p. 22. (emphasis added)
3. Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species: A Facsimile of the First
Edition, Harvard University Press, 1964, p. 189.