“Many of the most prominent neo-Darwinists have written at one time or another that natural selection is a tautology, a way of saying the same thing twice. In this formulation the theory predicts that the fittest organisms will produce the most offspring, and it defines the fittest organisms as the ones which produce the most offspring. It is important to document this point, because many Darwinists have convinced themselves that the tautology idea is a misunderstanding introduced into the literature by creationists and other uncomprehending faultfinders. But here are a few examples collected by Norman Macbeth:
J. B. S. Haldane (1935): ” … the phrase ‘survival of the fittest,’ is something of a tautology. So are the most mathematical theorems. There is no harm in saying the same truth in two different ways.
Ernst Mayr (1963): “… those individuals that have the most offspring are by definition … the fittest ones.”
George Gaylord Simpson (1964): “Natural selection favors fitness only if you define fitness as leaving more descendants. In fact geneticists do define it that way, which may be confusing to others. To a geneticists fitness has nothing to do with health, strength, good looks, or anything but effectiveness in breeding.”
The explanation by Simpson just quoted indicates why it is not easy to formulate the theory of natural selection other than as a tautology. It may seem obvious, for example, that it is advantageous for a wild stallion to be able to run faster, but in the Darwinian sense this will be true only to the extent that a faster stallion sires more offspring. If greater speed leads to more frequent falls, or if faster stallions tend to outdistance the mares and miss opportunities for reproduction, then the improvement may be disadvantageous.
Just about any characteristic can be either advantageous or disadvantageous, depending upon the surrounding environmental conditions. Does it seem that the ability to fly is obviously an advantage? Darwin hypothesized that natural selection might have caused beetles on Madeira to lose the ability to fly, because beetles capable of flight tended to be blown out to sea. The large human brain requires a skull which causes discomfort and danger to the mother in childbirth. We assume that our brain size is advantageous because civilized human dominate the planet, but it is far from obvious that the large brain was a net advantage in the circumstances in which it supposedly evolved. Among primates in general, those with the largest brains are not the ones least in danger of extinction.
In all such cases we can presume a characteristic to be advantageous because a species which has it seems to be thriving, but in most cases it is impossible to identify the advantage independently of the outcome. That is why Simpson was so insistent that ‘advantage’ has no inherent meaning others than actual success in reproduction. All we can say is that the individuals which produced the most offspring must have had the qualities required for producing the most offspring.
The famous philosopher of science Karl Popper at one time wrote that Darwinism is not really a scientific theory because natural selection is an all purpose explanation which can account for any thing, and which therefore explains nothing. Popper backed away from this position after he was besieged by indignant Darwinists protests, but he had plenty of justification for taking it. As he wrote in his own defense, ‘some of the greatest contemporary Darwinisits themselves formulated the theory in such a way that it amounts to the tautology that those organisms that leave most offspring leave most offspring,’ citing Fisher, Haldane, Simpson, ‘and others.’ One of the others was C. H. Waddington, whose attempt to make sense of the matter deserves to be preserved for posterity:
Darwin’s major contribution was, of course, the suggestion that evolution can be explained by the natural selection of random variations. Natural selection, which was at first considered as though it were a hypothesis that was in need of experimental or observational confirmation, turns out on closer inspection to be a tautology, a statement of an inevitable but previously unrecognized relation. It states that the fittest individuals in a population (defined as those which leave the most offspring) will leave the most offspring. This fact no way reduces the magnitude of Darwin’s achievement; only after it was clearly formulated, could biologists realize the enormous power of the principle as a weapon of explanation.
That was not an offhand statement, but a considered judgment published in a paper presented at the great convocation at the University of Chicago in 1959 celebrating the hundredth anniversary of the publication of the Origin Of Species. Apparently, none of the distinguished authorities present told Waddington that a tautology does not explain anything. When I want to know how a fish can become a man, I am not enlightened by being told that the organisms that leave the most offspring are the ones that leave the most offspring.
It is not difficult to understand how leading Darwinists were led to formulate natural selection as a tautology. The contemporary neo-Darwinian synthesis grew out of population genetics, a field anchored in mathematics and concerned with demonstrating how rapidly very small mutational advantages could spread in a population. The advantages in question were assumptions in a theorem, not qualities observed in nature, and the mathematicians naturally tended to think of them as ‘whatever it was that caused the organism and its descendants to produce more offspring than other members of the species.’ This way of thinking spread to the zoologists and paleontologists, who found it convenient to asume that their guiding theory was simply true by definition. As long as outside critics were not paying attention, the absurdity of the tautology formulation was in no danger of exposure.
What happened to change this situation is that Popper’s comment received a great deal of publicity, and creationists and other unfriendly critics began citing it to support their contention that Darwinism is not really a scientific theory. The Darwinists themselves became aware of a dangerous situation, thereafter critics raising the tautology claim wer firmly told that they were simply demonstrating their inability to understand Darwinism….In practice natural selection continues to be employed in its tautological formulation.
… Although natural selection can be formulated as a tautology, and often has been, it can also be formulated in other ways that are not so easily dismissed.
Phillip Johnson
Darwin On Trial — pp. 20-23
This is totally off-topic, but as you’ve been discussing both Darwin and Keynes… Did you know that these two families merged at some point?
I was reading about the actors from the Narnian films and discovered that Skandar Keynes, who plays Edmund, is, through his father’s line, the great-great-great grandson of Darwin and the great-great nephew of Keynes. His father (Randal Keynes) is of course carrying on the family work.
A bit ironic? Skandar says of his character, “But, in the end, Narnia makes him good.” Am I reading way too much into this or is this a bit too much like Rom. 1? Worshiping the created (Narnia) rather than the Creator (Aslan)?
Nickey,
That is fascinating about the Keynes and Darwin families. When I read it I thought … well, that fits. I’m glad Keynes’ Homosexual gene wasn’t dominant to the point of ending his line.
No, I don’t think you’re reading to much into it.
You see such a quote suggests that Christianity is about making bad men good when before it is about that it is about declaring bad men to be good for the sake of Jesus Christ (This is what Lewis’ Stone Table in “The Lion The Witch And The Wardrobe was all about). Secondly, it really is a misreading of the story to think it was Narnia that made Edmund good and not Aslan.
But this is Hollywood, and what should we expect from a pig but a grunt?
Bret, just to be clear, natural selection is not necessary historical-biological evolution. We would be wise not to confuse them.
Joshua M,
Could you expound a bit on the point you’re making please? Are you saying that there is such a thing as micro natural selection?
Bahnsen goes into this in one of his lectures on Evolution. It is absurd to claim that survival of the fittest is verifiable statement and therefore is anything but “scientific”.
Dave,
All science is anything but “scientific.”
No, all science is only coherent on the Christian presupposition.
“Are you saying that there is such a thing as micro natural selection? “
Well, I thought everybody ascribed to that. Doesn’t matter which viewpoint. Answers in Genesis agrees with it, for example. They have to, otherwise there’s no great explanation for biodiversity after the flood that I know of. There is a reason you are supposed to finish your prescribed bottle of antibiotics.
If you have a different view, I would like to know it. I’m not sure in what context the Johnson discussion occurs.
See this:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/get-answers/topic/natural-selection
And then this, which I’ll quote from:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/get-answers/topic/arguments-we-dont-use
“Natural selection is in one sense a tautology. Who are the fittest? Those who survive and leave the most offspring. Who survive and leave the most offspring? The fittest. But a lot of this is semantic wordplay, and depends on how the matter is defined, and for what purpose the definition is raised. There are many areas of life in which circularity and truth go hand in hand. For example, what is electric charge? That quality of matter on which an electric field acts. What is an electric field? A region in space that exerts a force on electric charge. But no one would claim that the theory of electricity is thereby invalid and can’t explain how motors work; it is only that circularity cannot be used as independent proof of something. To harp on the issue of tautology can become misleading, if the impression is given that something tautological therefore doesn’t happen. Of course the environment can “select,” just as human breeders select. But demonstrating this doesn’t mean that fish could turn into philosophers by this means. The real issue is the nature of the variation, the information problem. Arguments about tautology distract attention from one of the real weaknesses of neo-Darwinism—the source of the new information required. Given an appropriate source of variation (for example, an abundance of created genetic information with the capacity for Mendelian recombination), replicating populations of organisms would be expected to be capable of some adaptation to a given environment, and this has been demonstrated amply in practice.
Natural selection is also a useful explanatory tool in creationist modeling of post-Flood radiation with speciation (see Get Answers: Natural Selection).”
No, I agree with that. I was just trying to find out if that is what your were saying.
Dave,
Right ….
Gordon Clark used to say something like “Science is never true though sometimes useful.”
“I’m glad Keynes’ Homosexual gene wasn’t dominant to the point of ending his line.”
Just to clarify, he is Keynes nephew, so I take that to mean one of J.M.’s brothers married one of Darwin’s daughters. I have no clue if J.M. himself had children or not.
Keynes had no children.
Bret, I do love that quote but it is so high-brow I often find myself grasping at it’s meaning! 🙂
Far from being a tautology, ‘natural selection’ strikes me as an oxymoron, that is to say, an apparent contradiction that, far from meaning nothing, actually has a deeper meaning than can readily be conveyed in a less paradoxically formulated way.