So, I don't know if anyone (I know you will, RRen, heh) knew that Behe has been scribbling away for a while and has produced a new book.
"The Edge of Evolution"
Well, reviews of the book are coming in and make for interesting reading. Anyway, thought Sean Carroll's and Nick Matzke's reviews are worth
investing the time to read. I reckon you try to pick it up from some second-hand bookstore, the people who bought may well deserve to get some sort of
refund.
Sean Carroll
"The Lord hath delivered him into mine hands."
Those are the words that Thomas Huxley, Darwin's confidant and staunchest ally, purportedly murmured to a colleague as he rose to turn Bishop Samuel
Wilberforce's own words to his advantage and rebut the bishop's critique of Darwin's theory at their legendary 1860 Oxford debate. They are also
the first words that popped into my head as I read Michael J. Behe's The Edge of Evolution: The Search for the Limits of Darwinism. In it, Behe makes
a new set of explicit claims about the limits of Darwinian evolution, claims that are so poorly conceived and readily dispatched that he has
unwittingly done his critics a great favor in stating them.
continued...
www.sciencemag.org...
Nick Matzke:
Oh, I almost forgot the best part: Which apicomplexan critter is it that builds cilia despite Behe's declaration that "a functioning cilium
requires a working IFT"? Why, it's Plasmodium falciparum, aka malaria, aka Behe's own biggest running example used throughout The Edge of
Evolution. Yes, it's the very critter about which Behe wrote on page 237,
"Here's something to ponder long and hard: Malaria was intentionally designed. The molecular machinery with which the parasite invades red blood
cells is an exquisitely purposeful arrangement of parts."
But not, apparently, the parts which Behe thought were required for cilium construction. If there is an Intelligent Designer up there, I suspect He's
having a bit of a chuckle right now.
www.pandasthumb.org...
Apart from the quite fine fisking that Matzke provides, it's interesting to note that Behe suggests that one of the biggest killers in the world was
designed by some intelligent character. Nice to know. I assume the Devil's....sorry I mean not so beneficient disembodied telic entity's
fingerprints are in the DNA somewhere.
I reckon it should be renamed as 'malevolent design'.
[edit on 9-6-2007 by melatonin]