Farid Gazizov Impact of Evolution On Human Thought Evolution
Farid Gazizov Impact of Evolution On Human Thought Evolution
Farid Gazizov Impact of Evolution On Human Thought Evolution
“Powerful telescopes reveal new stars coalescing from galactic dust, just as our
sun did more than 4.5 billion years ago. The earth itself formed shortly
thereafter, when rock, dust, and gas circling the sun condensed into the planets
of our solar system. Fossils of primitive microorganisms show that life had
emerged on earth by about 3.8 billion years ago (Teaching about evolution and
the Natural of Science, ch. 1).”
Many people throughout the centuries have been trying to find explanations to the
questions like: Why are surrounding us things the way they are?; why some type of
animals resemble another one? It was hard to answer these questions without proper
tools, experience and background knowledge. Even nowadays, not all questions are
answered. Darwin was the first human who succeeded in responding to these questions.
He was the first one who put discovered facts and knowledge available by his time in one
big picture. In attempts to explain the history Darwin created the most outstanding
achievement of human beings that had enormous impact of our thinking—evolutionary
thinking. Ernest Mayer, in his book “One Long Argument” says following about impact
of Darwin’s work on human thinking.
“It is almost impossible for a modern person to project back to the early half of
the nineteenth century and reconstruct the thinking of this pre-Darwinian period,
so great has been the impact of Darwinism on our views (E. Mayr, pp. 1)
For our further discussion, one should explicitly distinguish between evolution
and evolutionary theory. Evolution (history) is a serious of facts that occurred since the
birth of the earth, while evolutionary theory is the best way available nowadays to
explain why evolution happened the way it happened, but not otherwise. Both evolution
and evolutionary theory make series of claims. Some of them are secondary and some
are primary. Primary claims if proved wrong, would change entire theory.
Primary Claims of Evolution
The earth is over 4 billion years old. In the past when technology was not very
developed it was hard to prove age of the earth. Scientists had been aging by measuring
the rate of sedimentation. Another method of defining age, which was used in 1800s, is
noticing what kinds of fossil rocks have. Currently it is done by chemical analysis of
composition of fossil.
Life on the earth did not appear right after appearance of the earth. The first sings
of life were dated about 550 million years ago according to the oldest fossils. This fact
does not specifically mean that where was not life forms before that time. Life forms
were very simple and lacked hard parts like bones or shells and could rarely preserve in
the fossils.
For example, during laying eggs season, sea turtles hay hundreds of thousands
eggs. While hatching and getting to the ocean most of the generation becomes easy pray
of sea birds. Since just hatched turtles do not have a hard cover that could protect them,
many of them dye in the ocean. By maturity time only about one out of thousand turtles
stay alive. Currently there are billions of living organisms that inhabit the earth, but they
represent only around one percent of all living organisms that have ever lived on the earth
since its birth. Ninety nine percent dyed out.1
“In 1862, Henry Walter Bates made brilliant use of the Darwinian mechanism of
natural selection asking why it is that some species of butterfly very closely
mimic species of butterfly, essentially quite different, Bates proved beyond doubt
that the answer lies in adaptive advantage brought about by natural selection. The
mimicked insects are highly distasteful to birds who think that they belong to
distasteful species. Bates showed experimentally that birds learn to avoid
distasteful insects, and that the closer the mimic, the less change there is that the
insect will be eaten.”
Starting at 1950 up to 1970 evidence begin exposing to the world that support
hypothesis of continent’s slow movement. Sonar mapping of the ocean floor showed
winding, continuous ridges system around the planet. The ridges appeared where molten
matter was coming up from the earth’s inside.
Not only topography of the earth has changed, but composition atmosphere has
changed as well. Current atmosphere contains a lot of oxygen, which is result of
1
Teaching about Evolution
existence of life. During photosynthesis, green plants consume water and dioxide and
release oxygen in atmosphere. This is considered to be a secondary claim because even if
the earth would not developed as it considered, it would have no impact on evolutionary
theory.
Origin of human being was an interest of human more than origin of plant and
animals. Attempt to understand and explain origin of humans is expressed in religions,
legends of all kind of trails and folks. For a long period of time science knowledge were
abrupt and incomplete in order to solve a problem of human origin. Only in 1857 Darwin
expressed hypothesis, and in 1871 in his book “The Origin of man and relation to sex,”
convincelly proved that humans originate from pre-existing humanlike, but were not
created by intelligent designer. Role of social factors, which was pointed out by Darwin,
was detailly described by Fredrik Engels in his book “Role of labor in the process of
turning ape into humans.” (1896)
Human being evolved from other pre-existing species. Even in ancient times it
has been noticed that humans have a lot of in common with a other animals just like other
animals human had the same internal organs (heart, lungs, liver etc.). Ancient Greeks
had a scale of living organisms known by their time. Human being was placed at the end
of the scale. Below were higher animals like houses, sheep and so forth, but it is hard to
believe that humans were next step in the biological evolution of living organisms right
after higher animals. Only by the eighteenth century ape-like being became known to
Europe. This discover shed light on a huge gap between higher animal and humans
(Darwinism defended, Ruse, pp. 230). After that some scientists (for example Huxley)
assumed that humans descended from apes. Later, having examined all differences
between apes and humans, Huxley came to conclusion that humans and apes descended
from a common ancestor. One would probably ask why our common ancestor did split
into two branches, apes and Australopithecus afarensis (which is considered to be an
ancestor of all hominids). There is a scientific explanation, which relates to climatic
changes in Africa. Our ancestor was used to live in the area of heavy precipitation. With
a passage of time climate started turning into dry one and forestlands began retreating,
leaving behind Savannah’s. Some species stayed in dwindling forests. Others (our
ancestors) started advancing toward opened spaces.
With a change of place of inhabitation, there were some changes in diet of our
ancestor. Anthropologists suggested that tooth reduction took place because our ancestor
started to use grass seeds and the like as a food source (Darwinism Defended).
A. afarensis
A. africanus
H. habilis
A. robustus
H. erectus
H. sapiens
“Organisms in nature topically produce more offspring that can survive and
reproduce given the constraints of food, space, and other resources in the
environment. These offspring often differ from one another in ways that are
heritable—that is, they can pass on the differences genetically to their own
offspring. If competing offspring have traits that are advantageous in a given
environment, they will survive and pass on those traits. As differences continue
to accumulate over generations, populations of organisms diverge from their
ancestors.”
Process of natural selection consists of two steps: the first one is reproduction of
genetically different species; the second step is surviving of the most adopted individuals
in surrounding environment. An example can be nest of birds in which some nestlings
have a little bit different coloring than others. If this coloring better matches the tree
these birds in habit, this will give them advantage of better hiding from predators, which
leads to increase in changes of reproduction. Below are example that Wallace, Alfred
Russle uses in his book “Contributions to the theory of Natural Selection” to demonstrate
natural selection.
“The Duke of Argyll, in his “Reigh of Law,” has pointed out the admirable
adaptation of the colors of the woodcock to its protection. The various browns
and yellows and pale ash-color that occur in fallen leaves are all reproduced in its
plumage, so that when according to its habit it rests upon the ground under trees,
it is almost impossible to detect it. In snipes the colors are modified so as to be
equally in harmony with the prevalent forms and colors of marshy vegetation.
Mr. J.M.Lester, in a paper read before the Rugby School Natural History Society,
observes: --“The wood-dove, when perched amongst the branches of its favorite
fir, is scarcely discernible; whereas, were it among some lighter foliage, the blue
and purple tints in its plumage would far sooner betray it. The robin redbreast
too, although it might be thought that on its breast made it much easier to be seen,
is in reality not at all endangered by it, since it generally contributes to get among
some russet or yellow fading leaves, where the red matches very well with the
autumn tints, and the brown of the rest of the body with the bare branches.”
Core of natural selection is variation within the kind. If variation does not exist
either entire kind will survive and stay unchanged or it will go extinct. But what it a
source of variation? The ultimate source of variation is mutations in genes. If new traits
gained through mutation leads to successful survival and reproduction than new traits will
be inherited and spread within the population. Mutation is random, but natural selection
is not.
All living organisms that currently inhabit the earth share common ancestry.
Through the history by means of natural selection and variation first, simple forms of life
were evolving into different, more complex forms. How to prove it?
“The discovery of the structure of DNA by Francis Crick and James Watson in
1953 extended the study of evolution to most fundamental level the sequence of
the chemical basis in DNA both specifies the order of amino acids in proteins and
determines which proteins are source of both change and continuity in evolution.
The modification of DNA through occasional changes or rearrangements in the
base sequences underlies the emergence of new traits, and thus of new species, in
evolution. At the same time, all organisms use the same molecular codes to
translate DNA base sequences into Protein amino acid sequences. This
uniformity in genetic code is power evidence for the interrelatedness of living
things.” (Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science, ch. 2, pp. 4)
Another powerful argument that supports common ancestry is a fact that man is
developed from an ovule, about the 125th of an inch in diameter, which does not differ
from the ovules of other animals. At a very early period, the embryo can hardly be
distinguished from another member of vertebrate kind.
In order to convince one that evolution happened the way evolutionary theory
describes it evidences must be presented. Major evidence and argument of evolutionary
theory is that all of the mechanisms of evolutionary theory change are currently
observable. Let us take for example main mechanism of evolutionary change—natural
selection. Nowadays our society is facing serious public health problem. Bacteria that
medicine used to successfully fight with antibiotics is becoming more resistant to one.
This means that week bacteria go extinct and only strong (more resistant to antibiotics)
bacteria survived. (Teaching about evolution, ch. 2, pp. 5) “continued use and overuse of
antibiotics has had the effect of selecting for resistant population because the antibiotics
give these strains and advantage over non-resistant strains”
Bibliography
1) “Long Argument,” Ernest Mayr, Harvard University Press, 1991.
3) “The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex,” Charles Darwin, 1974.
4) “Wonderful Life,” Stephen Jay Gould, W.W. Norton & Company, 1989.