Post details: But, Jerry, what about all those dogs?

12/13/10

Permalinkby 03:17:54 pm, Categories: Commentary - OpEd, 341 words   English (CA)

But, Jerry, what about all those dogs?

by Denyse O'Leary
ARN correspondent

Apparently, Jerry Coyne is now attacking me, re Behe's recent paper. To judge from his blog post's title, he has me confused with Discovery Institute.*

(Behe's paper is available for free download here).
.
Dr. Coyne claims that Behe's findings apply only to artificial selection in the lab. But, at the feet of the great Richard Dawkins, I learned that artificial selection like human breeding of dogs, has proved Behe both wrong and ridiculous, in Edge of Evolution. That is precisely because dog breeding is equivalent to the process that applies throughout nature:

Don’t evade the point by protesting that dog breeding is a form of intelligent design. It is (kind of), but Behe, having lost the argument over irreducible complexity, is now in his desperation making a completely different claim: that mutations are too rare to permit significant evolutionary change anyway. From Newfies to Yorkies, from Weimaraners to water spaniels, from Dalmatians to dachshunds, as I incredulously close this book I seem to hear mocking barks and deep, baying howls of derision from 500 breeds of dogs — every one descended from a timber wolf within a time frame so short as to seem, by geological standards, instantaneous.
All you have to do, it seems, is leave out intelligent design.

Dawkins said this in the Bible, and all the wise nodded in assent.

Well, either artificial selection is relevant or it isn't. Maybe Coyne and Dawkins should talk more.

*We share some initials, it's true. My middle name is Ileen. The confusion is inevitable.

Also just up at The Post-Darwinist:

Could Darwinists be running low on insults?

But I really DO think that Christian Darwinism is an oxymoron

You'd rather watch this than passing trains

Saturday morning coffee break: Frosty the Snowman was not designed, he evolved

Listening: Michael Behe crosses the (not!) warm little Pond

f you are a Darwinist, can you be a Christian if people just say so ... ?

From the quote mine: Themisunderestimated virtues of skepticism

Denyse O'Leary is co-author of The Spiritual Brain.

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