With the release of his 2000 book , Jonathan Wells became one of the leading evolution critics of today. Unlike some detractors, Dr. Wells has impeccable credentials鈥攚ith Ph.Ds. in molecular and cell biology from U.C. Berkeley and religious studies from Yale.
Last week he released a new book that is just as controversial (and frankly, just as fun) called, . He begins the book with a narrative about the so-called 鈥淲ar on eggs,鈥 in which the U.S. government promoted the idea that eggs cause cholesterol and are thus unhealthy.
There is only one problem with this longstanding narrative鈥It鈥檚 false. That鈥檚 right, the science simply doesn鈥檛 support the claim that eggs are bad for you. In fact, it鈥檚 just the opposite! In 2015, the U.S. government finally backed off.
What do we conclude from this? According to Dr. Wells, 鈥淥bviously, we cannot always trust what 鈥榮cience says,鈥 and an endorsement by the government doesn鈥檛 make it any more trustworthy. In fact, we are told many things by 鈥榮cience鈥 that are not true.鈥
What Is Zombie Science?
The premise of is that there is a similar phenomenon at work in the question of human origins. Rather than following the evidence wherever it leads, says Wells, many scientists are committed to methodological naturalism, which is the view that science is limited to materialistic explanations. Wells is careful to indicate that he is not calling certain people zombies, but rather that there is a persistence to defending materialistic explanations of science even after these examples have been shown to be empirically dead鈥攈ence his use of the title 鈥渮ombies.鈥
In Icons, Wells analyzed ten of the most common examples for evolution and claims that they misrepresent the evidence. In Zombie Science, Wells updates his criticism, showing that the same examples keep appearing in textbooks, even though many scientists have known for decades that they misrepresent the evidence.
If these icons were innocent mistakes, then biologists would have eagerly corrected them, right? Since they persist, says Wells, there must be something else besides the evidence that keeps them 鈥渁live.鈥
For instance, Darwin considered embryological development the best evidence for his theory. He cited drawings from the German Biologist Ernst Haeckel, which allegedly reveal how the embryological development of various vertebrate animals mirrors the larger evolutionary story of common descent. Yet despite its prominence, it has been known since at least 1997 that the Haeckel鈥檚 drawings were cherry-picked, inaccurate, and fake. In fact, Wells concludes,
鈥The real issue is that Haeckel鈥檚 drawings omitted half of the evidence鈥攖he half that doesn鈥檛 fit Darwin鈥檚 claim that embryos are most similar in their early stages鈥 (58).
Nonetheless, Haeckel鈥檚 drawings continue to appear in textbooks published after 2000, such as Donald Prothero鈥檚 2013 textbook Bringing Fossils to Life. And the 2016 textbook Biology, by Mader and Windelspecht, uses re-drawn versions of Haeckel鈥檚 embryos that make the same (mistaken) point.
Publishers could possibly be forgiven if this was the only mistake. But as Wells indicates, similar evidential misrepresentations continue for other 鈥渋cons鈥 including the Miller-Urey experiment, Archaeopteryx, peppered moths, Darwin鈥檚 finches, and more. Like zombies, these 鈥渆vidences鈥 simply won鈥檛 die.
Dead Flies and Horses
One of the most interesting sections of the book was the discussion of epigenetics. Broadly speaking, epigenetics refers to the various factors involved in development, including genetics.
In the 20th century, the dominant view of biology was that evolution proceeded genetically from DNA to RNA to proteins to us. As a result, evolution could advance through genetic mutations that accumulate over time.
But according to Dr. Wells, there are significant carriers of information, such as biological membranes, beyond DNA sequences. In other words, the claim that the genome carries all the information necessary to build an organism is false. As a result, mutations or changes in DNA alone are not sufficient to build new function and form. Wells concludes:
鈥All of the evidence points to one conclusion: No matter what we do to the DNA of a fruit fly embryo, there are only three possible outcomes: a normal fruit fly, a defective fruit fly, or a dead fruit fly. Not even a horse fly, much less a horse鈥 (94).
Is Darwinism Dead?
Wells also offers critiques for newer 鈥渋cons,鈥 such as whale evolution, antibiotic resistance, vestigial structures such as human tails and the appendix, and the evolution of the human eye. And he pulls no punches. He believes that materialism corrupts both science and religion.
Towards the end of the book, Wells makes a bold prediction:
鈥淭oday, evolutionary theory is like spring ice. It still covers the lake, and to many people it still looks solid. But it鈥檚 honeycombed with melt-water. It can no longer carry the weight it once did. Summer is on the way.鈥
You may agree with Dr. Wells. Or you may think he鈥檚 mistaken. But a book with as cool of a title as Zombie Science at least deserves a fair reading.
You can find on .
Jonathan Wells, Zombie Science (Seattle, WA: Discovery Institute Press, 2016), 16.
In an interview for the journal Science, British embryologist Michael Richardson said, 鈥淚t looks like it鈥檚 turning out to be one of the most famous fakes in biology.鈥 Quoted in Elizabeth Pennisi, 鈥淗aeckel鈥檚 embryos: Fraud rediscovered,鈥 Science 277 (1997): 1435.