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Biological Origins: A Metaphysical
Reconstruction
Considered in its proper domain,
ultimately the question of biological origins is a cosmological question and not
a question of biology or paleontology. This reconstruction of biological origins
is not to avoid so-called scientific data; it is only to place the question in
its proper domain. It is clear from the contemporary scientific data that there
exist compelling arguments against chance evolution. A case in point is numerous
examples found in Behe’s Darwin’s
Black Box and there are hundreds of other works.
These works continue to appear. However, the position being taken here does not
rest on scientific data; it is essentially a meta-scientific
construction based on the following reasons.
The
central thesis of Darwinism, the contention that one species can transform
itself into another, merely through natural selection, based on the survival of
the fittest, suffers from “a missing link,” as Whitall Perry has so cogently
stated it in The
Widening Breach. “This missing link is de facto
the pole ‘subject’,
apart from which the pole ‘object’
is inconceivable.”
This subject-object polarity is present
everywhere in the manifest universe. “Everything manifested proclaims its
self-insufficiency by testifying existentially to that other half which it is
not.”
Thus we have knower-known, cause-effect, activity-passivity, emptiness-fullness,
expansion-contraction, life-death and scores of other polarizations at all
levels of existence. One can actually expand this list endlessly. The evolution
hypothesis suffers from this missing link, for it conceives an inanimate matter,
an object, without its pole, subject. Moreover, this object is conceived as an
independent primal cosmic dust, which, billions of years ago, arrived at a
tropismatic molecular organization of the amino acid constituents of protein,
providing us the biochemical components of protoplasm.
Then either through sophisticated filter-passing viruses or some other
mechanism, this inanimate matter went through the mysterious transformation and
became animate. Through evolutionary process and after passing through several
stages, this matter became bacteria —the immediate ancestor of protozoa. This
hypothesis accords an absolute, unlimited autonomy to this substance, an
autonomy that allows it to float through endless space or endless eons, an
autonomy that is, moreover, uniquely conceived as without a purpose. Mere random
selection, based on chance, then, leads to an organic state. But, as William
Dembski has shown in The Design Inference,
in specified events of small probability, undirected natural causes lose their
explanatory power.
Thus, chance cannot be accorded the pivotal position that it enjoys in
evolutionary theories.
This subject/object relationship is
essentially the linchpin for the whole argument against evolutionism for there
can be no object without a subject. Evolutionists may claim that one pole of a
duality can exist in the total and unqualified non-existence of its corollary or
counterpart but such claims cannot be valid for the simple reason that in the
whole of manifest universe, not a single example can be found to support this
claim. On the other hand, the manifest universe is full of subject/object
relationships which are expressed in numerous phenomena—the regularity with
which the heavenly objects move, the unerring functioning of all the laws of
matter according to their properties and the inter-play of a wide range of
dualities to produce logical results in the phenomenal world.
The primordial truth is that the Being
of all beings is but only one Being and that polarities appear only at the
manifest plane of reality. And once we accept this, everything in the universe
speaks convincingly of the grand design that manifests itself in this polarity:
the laws that govern the appearance of night and day, the water cycle, the
marvelous habits of the honeybees, the hexagonal structure of the beehives which
join so that the apex angle of the individual cells is always 70.5290.
We are not speaking here from the
perspective of the great religious traditions—Jewish, Christian or
Islamic—for that would not be a convincing argument for those who have so
rashly abandoned the fountainhead that nourishes the spirit. The Tradition to
which we now wish to refer is the intellectual tradition and not the religious
tradition though such a bifurcation is hard to think of in case of these Islam.
This intellectual tradition, which spans
centuries of human existence, maintains that the Ultimate Truth is verifiable by
human intellect without recourse to revelation. In other words, man is capable
of finding out the nature of things unaided by the revealed message because this
ability is latent in the human constitution. Each major religious tradition has
its own paths to truth but the basic claim of these traditions rests on this
common ground.
Argument from Design
The second support for our thesis comes
from a well-established thesis that has always existed in the Origins debate:
the Argument from Design.
One of the main characteristics of
various theories of evolution is their reliance on “Chance” as means of
evolution rather than a “Design”. For if it could be proved that there
exists no design in the emergence of species (or individual organs) and that
each species and organ becomes perfect through gradation, as Darwin proposed,
then one can eliminate not only the Design, but also the Designer. However, if
on the contrary, it can be shown that there exists no possibility of chance
evolution of perfect organs and species, because of their complexity, and then
Darwin’s theory will break down. Darwin himself was conscious of this fact. He
wrote in The
Origins:
If it could be demonstrated that any complex
organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous,
successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down.
There exist in nature thousands of
examples of these complex organs as well complex chemical reactions that could
not have been a result of successive modifications. Michael Behe has produced
numerous examples of this nature in his Darwin’s
Black Box¾examples
that range from the biochemistry of vision to defensive mechanisms of bombardier
beetle to the complexity of the bacterial flagellum. Likewise, William
Dembski’s The
Design Inference convincingly shows how specified
events of small probability cannot be a result of chance. What we propose to do
here is simply to direct attention to the fact that argument from design is such
an old, well-established argument that there exists an enormous amount of data
on the subject in all traditional cosmogonies which refutes mechanism proposed
by Darwin’s theory.
Before we mention some of these
arguments from Design, let us first note that these arguments do not rest on the
premise that there exist a Designer behind the Design; rather, they build their
case on the same observable data to which Darwin had recourse.
These teleological arguments pursue two
distinct lines: the evidence of design on a minor scale or on a cosmic scale.
The evidence of design in both cases is either the functionality of nature or an
aesthetic quality in nature, that is its orderliness and beauty. Socrates, for
example, is known to have pointed out the diversity of man’s physiological and
psychological endowments and the phenomena surrounding man which contributes to
his well-being. He postulated that what “clearly is for a purpose” must be
the result of “forethought”, not “chance”. And he concluded that man
must have been made by a “wise demiurge”; and he said, “gods take care to
furnish men with the things they need... that nature
discloses divine ‘providence’
and ‘love of
man’.”
Cicero goes further. The spokesman for
Stoicism in his De
Natura Deorum offers phenomena of botanical,
zoological, meteorological and geological data to heap a wealth of evidence that
discloses functionality and hence design. “The world is governed by the
providence of the gods,” he declares, “everything in the world is governed,
for the welfare and preservation of all, by divine intelligence and deliberation
and not by chance.”
Galen was to follow a similar line of reasoning, adding details from human and
animal physiology.
The second line of teleological
arguments spanned the whole cosmos. These arguments refer to the immense beauty
and the regularity of the celestial bodies as a self-evident proof for a
“mind” that governs the universe. Several cosmic schemes and plans are
extent in literature from ancient times that employ an elaborate reasoning to
show that the “sympathetic, harmonious, all-pervading affinity of things …
forces” one to recognize “a single divine, all-pervading spirit,”
as Cicero’s stoic spokesman says in De Natura Deorum.
Both lines of these teleological
arguments lend themselves to a demonstration of unity in the universe; this was
particularly true for the second line that took the whole cosmos as its point of
departure. If there was beauty, compelling harmony, functionality,
interdependency, it was argued, then there must be a single overall design and
by extension, a single designer.
Both lines of arguments continued to
appear in the medieval Arabic philosophy and Jewish philosophy. But let it be
said that these ancient arguments had arrived in the Islamic intellectual
tradition after the transmitted sciences had been thoroughly established during
the two centuries of intense reflection on the Qur’an—the fountainhead of
all things Islamic. Revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, over a period of
twenty-three years (610-632),
the Qur’an provided a rich repository of technical terms to the nascent Muslim
community for reflection on the various modes of arguments used in the Divine
Book. Among the most astonishing aspects of the Qur’an was an emphatic
invitation to all humankind to reflect on the grand Design in Nature that
exhibits itself in such a compelling manner that no one with heart and soul and
mind can fail to recognize an underlying unity in the cosmos and hence a single
Designer, God.
Though compelling in its own way, these
are, however, not the arguments that we want to present here for the simple
reason that they originate with the ontological reality, which the skeptics fail
to accept. Hence they would easily render these powerful arguments irrelevant by
stating that had they accepted the Grand Designer, they would not be arguing
against the Design. Surely, we do not fall into the trap in which they
themselves readily fall: Only the
fittest survive. Who is the fittest? The one that survives!
Instead, what we propose to do is to
present a glimpse of the intricate arguments developed by that formidable
intellectual tradition that arose out of a unique synthesis of ancient Greek,
Persian and Indian civilizations through their contact with Islam. Though they
had recourse to the Qur’an, the representatives of this tradition recognized
the need to demonstrate an independent path that can lead human intellect to the
nature of reality without recourse to the Divine Book. But let me mention in
passing that the Qur’an itself does not use its ontological premise while
inviting humankind to reflect on the signs (Ayat) that are spread throughout the
universe —signs that speak to the
innate human intelligence in the most extraordinary manner. These include the
water cycle, the regeneration of earth after it has been dead, the periodic and
orderly movement of the heavenly bodies, the alternation of night and day (so
that ye may rest during the night and seek sustenance during the day), the six
stages of development of fetus in mother’s womb and a host of other natural
phenomena.
Indeed, an oft-repeated refrain in the Qur’an is “in this (sometimes these)
are signs for those who reflect.”
The tradition to which we wish to refer,
appeared in Islam almost two hundred years after the death of the Prophet and
rapidly expanded, absorbing, reshaping, recasting and appropriating material
from such diverse traditions as the Greek, the Syrian, the Persian and the
Indian in a grand synthesis. There were many Christians and Jews who were part
of this expanding universe and who contributed toward this intellectual
revolution of the first order through translations of Greek, Syrian, Persian and
Indian works into Arabic.
However, given the enormity of this intellectual tradition and what it has to
offer to our contemporary discourse on Origins, we can but merely point to a few
illustrious examples.
One of the metaphors employed by Cicero
goes back to the Cleanthes and Chrysippus of the old Stoa. They argued that the
design in the universe can be compared to the design apparent in a house. This
argument is based on aesthetics. Cleanthes contended that when someone comes
into a well arranged and regulated house, he cannot suppose that the order in
the house came about without a cause, hence with far more reason, the motion and
order of the world, which over an infinite past time have never played false,
must convince every observer that nature is directed by a mind.
This analogy was also used by Chrysippus who compared the beauty of the heavenly
bodies and the great magnitude of the oceans and lands to a giant and beautiful
house, thereby inferring that the world must have been constructed by the
immortal gods as a “domicile for themselves”.
Philo, too, mentions the analogy, crediting it to “those whose philosophy is
reputed to be the best”, the Stoics, who maintained: “Should
a man see a carefully built house … he will get a notion of the
craftsman … just so, anyone entering, as it were, the great house of the world
… and beholding the heavens … planets, stars … which move rhythmically,
harmoniously, and for the benefit of the whole, … beholding as well the
[arrangement and variety of] earth, … water, … air, … and fruits, … will
surely conclude that these [things]” are the works of “a creator, God.”
This analogy was to reappear in the
Islamic intellectual tradition, perhaps through the route of translation. The
earliest example is in an Arabic work, attributed to Jahiz which has been mentioned by various titles all of which
contain the term Reflection. The printed version is entitled, The
Book of Proofs and Reflections regarding Creation and Divine Governance, Kitab
al-Dala’il wa-l-Iti’bar ala al-khalq wa-l-Tadbir.
In its Arabic construction, the argument attempts to show that the universe not
only has an intelligent cause on the grounds that it shows a remarkably unified
design but also that a single creator must be behind this design who made it and
who provides for it. The argument further states that the planning (taqdir),
governance (tadbir)
… and order apparent in the universe must come from one single creator who
fitted the parts together and arranged them.
Note, the terms here have been transformed from the Greek philosophical
tradition to the Qur’anic usage. Taqdir and Tadbir
are oft-repeated terms used in the Qur’an in reference to the creation of the
universe and its maintenance by one single God.
Another example that can be traced from
Socrates to Jahiz is, interestingly, the argument which is also used in the
Qur’an. Socrates had insisted that the alteration of night and day has been
made for man’s proper function: “Gods provided [him] with a most beauteous
time for resting.”
The Spokesman for the Stoics in Cicero’s De
Natura Deorum counts “the alternation of day and
night which afford a time for acting and another time for resting” among the
gifts of divine providence. Kitab
al-Dala’il repeats this theme: “The rising of
the sun permits men to busy themselves in their affairs” and its setting
furnishes them with the opportunity of “repose for the recovery of their
bodies,” and indeed in forcing them, when necessary, to rest; for human greed
is so great that “many would never rest except for … the darkness of …
night.” Note, once again, the Qur’anic theme of the alternation of night and
day which the Qur’an presents as one of the proofs of Divine Design:
“Behold! in the creation of the heavens and the earth, in the alternation of
night and day, in the sailing of the ships through the ocean for the profit of
mankind; in the rain which God sends down from the skies, and the life which He
gives therewith to an earth that was dead; in the beasts of all kinds that He
scatters through the earth; in the change of the winds and the clouds which they
trail like their slaves between the sky and the earth; indeed [in all of these]
are signs for people who are wise. “
Argument against Design often marshals
so-called facts from the natural world in its support with the underlying
assumptions that these have been recently discovered. But in piling these mounds
of “facts”, it is often overlooked that no amount of hair-splitting can make
hair anything but hair. To be sure, what we know today about the physical world
far exceeds than what was known eight hundred years ago, but most of it is in a
quantitative sense. Medieval scientists were not innocent of these facts that
are often claimed to have been discovered yesterday. Just one source, our Kitab
al-Dala’il, accumulates hundreds of details from
plant biology, zoology, human physiology and psychology in support of its
argument from Design. Some examples are: The human eye, providentially protected
by eyelids, lashes and eyebrows, the digestive and excretory functions, Man’s
erect posture, the willingness of animals such as the ox, the horse, the dog,
the ass, the camel and the elephant to submit to man, although they are stronger
than he¾all
of these are mentioned in detail in this early source and they become much more
refined in later sources such as The
Wisdom in God’s Creation (al-Hikmah fi Makhluqat Allah ),
a book attributed to al-Ghazali (d. 1111).
One can continue to quote examples of
teleological arguments from this tradition ad infinitum. Suffice it to say that
Islamic intellectual tradition was not only aware of the need for formulating
the argument for Design independent of the ontological premises which were at
the heart of Islamic faith but it also carried it out to its ultimate limits with
increasing refinement. One can trace this thread from Muhasbi (d. 857), who has
a teleological argument for the unity of the cause of the universe, to Qasim b.
Ibrahim (785-860) for whom the “imprints” of perfect wisdom and the
“signs” of good governance manifest in the universe to prove that a wise and
good deity must be responsible, to argument from “wondrous wisdom” exhibited
in the universe which Maturidi (d.
944) was to use in his Kitab al-Tawhid
to the Ikhwan al-Safa’, the Brethren of Purity,
who offer a teleological argument for the existence of God in which the very
structure of planets and stars supplies the evidence of Design.
All of these traditional views maintain
that in this manifest world, the flow is from the higher to the lower and not
otherwise. Evolutionists envision the process in the inverse direction, from
below upwards, outwards to inwards, ascending from quantity towards quality, the
higher evolving from the lower. All that Darwin did was this: He came up “with
an amazing progression of ‘upward’
emanations, beguilingly flattering to a contemporary humanity now supplied with
all the arguments necessary for unabashedly presuming itself superior even to
Caesar and Christ by the circumstances alone of chronological succession.”
It is this difference in approach that
separates all modern scholarship from the traditional scholarship on evolution,
may that be the classical Kalam arguments used by scholars who adhered to the
three Abrahamic religions or the viewpoints of Chinese sages or those who were
rooted in the pre-modern Western tradition.
In this scheme of things, the universe
is considered as a one single unit, “as a city is one, or as an animal is one,
or as man is one, as the Ikhwan noted in their Rasai’l.”
Ibn Hazm was to add biological and
botanical data to the astronomical data of the Ikhwan along with an argument
from aesthetics which would build on the functionality of the argument. Thus he
admires the skill by which the limbs of the human body fit together and the
texture of the palm tree fiber, which is woven so skillfully that it seems to be
the work of a loom. But the important point to note is that Ibn Hazm’s final
appeal is to the intellect: it is in the human intellect that it must be
undoubtedly known that the celestial and terrestrial regions must have come
about by the “deliberation of a maker” who “exercises choice and
invention” and the evidence from both the macrocosmic and microcosmic planes
is “sufficient to conclude not only that the universe has a maker, but that it
has a single maker.”
This appeal to intellect is central to
the Islamic intellectual tradition. For Ikhwan, the creation of the universe
proceeds in the following manner:
1. Creator¾who
is one, simple, eternal, permanent
2. Intellect (caql)¾which
is of two kinds: innate and acquired.
3. Soul (nafs)¾which
is of three kinds: vegetative, animal and reasonable.
4 Matter (hayula)¾which
is of four kinds: matter of artifacts, physical matter, universal matter, and
original matter.
5. Nature (tabicah)¾which
is of five kinds: celestial nature and the four elemental natures.
6. Body (jism)¾which
has six directions: above, below, front, back, left and right.
7. The sphere¾which
has its seven planets.
8. The elements¾which
have eight qualities, these being in reality the four quantities combined two by
two: Earth¾cold
and dry; Water¾cold
and wet; Air¾warm
and wet; Fire¾warm
and dry.
9. Beings of this world¾which
are the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms, each having three parts.
Nasr notes the elegance inherent in this
table of generation: “The first four numbers are simple, universal beings¾he
numbers 1 to 4 already containing in themselves all numbers, since 1 + 2 + 3 + 4
= 10¾while
the other beings are compound.” He points out that it is from this point of
view that the Ikhwan divided the hierarchy of Being into the four-fold division
of God, Universal Intellect, Universal Soul and hylé.
Ikhwan produced a highly elaborate
system consisting of a hierarchy of beings¾a
system which is universal in its intrinsic value for it has exact counterparts
in Chinese, Indian, Greek, Christian and Islamic cosmologies (Fig. 3). These
conceptual dimensions of Nature are integrally connected with the spiritual
realization of the one who studies Nature. “According to the Ikhwan, the
qualities and perfections belonging to the various levels of the hierarchy of
Being are not in any way “subjective” or “anthropomorphic”.

Figure
3
: Representation of Chain of Being by Ikhwan as-Safa’
The diagram from the Risa’il,
visually describes the interrelatedness of all things from the “highest of the
high” to the “lowest of the low”. Even before Dr. Hamidullah based his
defense of evolution on The
Epistle of Ikhwan, Dietericihad already
constructed this case: Ikhwan support evolution in the Darwinian sense. Nasr had
already responded to it: “The chain of Being described by the Ikhwan possesses
a temporal aspect which has led certain scholars to the view that the authors of
the Rasa’il
believed in the modern theory of evolution.”
In a footnote, Nasr mentions Dieterici’s Der
Darwinismus im X. und XI Jahrhundert (Leipzig,
1878),
as one such proponent of evolution who saw the Brethren as Darwin’s precursor.
Nasr also states that in 1933, De Boer
had correctly refuted this thesis of Dieterici and reassert that the Ikhwan
simply implied a gradation and not evolution in the modern sense.
Let us also not that another similar
case was made by T. I. Raïnow concerning al-Biruni (362/973-442/1051). He says
that in “Alberuni’s fine and substantial work entitled India, which is devoted
to the history of all fields of Hindu thought, one may find the whole theory of
Darwinism already expounded more than eight hundred years before the publication
of the theory of natural selection.”
Professor Jan Z. Wilczynski, of the
Lebanese State University refuted this claim in his “On the Presumed Darwinism
of Alberuni Eight Hundred Years before Darwin, ISIS, 50:459-466 (December 1959).
Nasr also clarifies that according to
the Rasa’il,
all changes on earth occur as acts of the Universal Soul and not by an
independent agent acting within bodies here on earth. Secondly, Ikhwan construe
this world as a shadow of another world that is more real than it, and the
“idea” of everything in this world actually exists in the other, so that
there is no question of the species changing into another, because the
“idea” of each species is a form which is beyond change and decay. He quotes
Ikhwan:
The species and genus are definite and
preserved. Their forms are in matter. But the individuals are in perpetual flow;
they are neither definite nor preserved. The reason for the conservation of
forms, genus and species, in matter is fixity of their celestial cause because
their efficient cause is the Universal Soul of the spheres instead of the change
and continuous flux of individuals which is due to the variability of their
cause.
Nasr mentions that there exist certain
similarities between the doctrines held by the Ikhwan and modern theories of
evolution. For example, both believe that the date of existence of terrestrial
plants precedes that of animals, minerals proceed the plants, organism adapt to
their environment but he asserts that the conception of Ikhwan was teleological:
Everything existed for a purpose, the final purpose of the cosmos being the
return of multiplicity to Unity. Also, there exists no struggle for life,
adaptation to the environment is not due to the struggle for survival, but due
to the “Wisdom of the Creator, Who has given each creature what corresponds to
its need.”
Nasr makes the distinction between
modern ideas and those of Ikhwan by stating: “In the deepest sense, what
separates all these ideas of the Ikhwan from their modern counterparts is that
for the Ikhwan the hands of God were not cut off from creation after the
beginning of the world—as is the case with the deists. On the contrary, every
event here ‘below’ is performed from ‘above’ by the Universal Soul,
which is God’s agent. Consequently, the purpose of the study of Nature is to
see these ‘vestiges of God’¾the
vestigia Dei as the
medieval Latins used to express it—so that, thanks to the analogy existing
between the Universe and man, the soul through this knowledge of cosmic
realities can come to know itself better and ultimately be able to escape from
the earthly prison into which it has fallen.”
Like the Ikhwan, Abu Raihan al-Biruni
also uses this medieval scheme in which Man is perceived in relation to his
position within the universe. The “migration” mentioned by al-Biruni,
however, once again signifies the gradation of being in the Universe which
according to al-Biruni and most of his contemporaries, is a hierarchy in which
each creature occupies a position in the ontological scale in conformity with
its own nature. The mineral kingdom forms the base of support for the plants and
animals. al-Biruni also accepts the analogy of microcosm and macrocosm, which is
closely related to the concept of chain of Being.
But let us note the position of the
Ikhwan is rather a marginal position in Islamic thought; there are different
opinions about their origins. Most modern scholars tend to agree that they were
Ismacilis.
As we have already pointed out, al-Ghazali refuted their ideas. He himself was
to put together a simple teleological argument along with the argument from
creation, the proof that first establishes the creation of the world and then
infers the existence of a creator.
An important point to note is that al-Ghazali’s
appeal is to the inborn faculty of Man to grasp the teleological argument and
though he starts by quoting the teleological verses from the Qur’an (2:164):
“Behold, in
the creation of the heavens and the earth, in the alternation of night and day,
in the ships that float on the sea for the profit of mankind, in the rain which
God sends down from the skies, and in the life which He gives therewith to an
earth that is dead; in the beasts of all kinds that He scatters through earth;
in driving forth of the winds and
clouds between the sky and the earth; indeed are signs for those who understand.”
But having referred to the Divine Book, he then declares that no one
“possessing the least intelligence who reflects upon these verses, who gazes
upon the wonder of God’s creation on earth and in heaven, who gazes upon the
marvelous formation of animals and plants,” can doubt that “the well adapted
arrangement” depends on a “maker who governs… and adapts it.”
Al-Ghazali also wrote a separate book, al-Hikmah
fi Makhluqat Allah (Wisdom in the Creation of Allah),
in which he points out the wisdom and design inherent in the sky, earth, sun,
moon, oceans, water, air, fire, Man as well as birds, bees, fish and minerals.
He mentions mosquitoes, flies and pearls.
In his Kitab Jawahir al-Qur’an (The Jewels of the
Qur’an), in the chapter “Secrets of the Sura
of the Opening, and how it comprises eighth of the ten valuables of the
Qur’an”, he had already pointed out to a remarkable fact about the spiders:
Look at the spider, how God has created its
limbs and has taught it the device of weaving, and how He has taught it the
tricks of hunting without two wings, for He has created for it sticky saliva by
which it connects itself with a corner lying in wait for the passing of a
mosquito close to itself. It throws itself onto the mosquito, catches it,
shackles it with its threads composed from its saliva, and thus disables it from
escaping until it eats it or puts it in store. Look at the spider’s method of
weaving its house, how God has guided it in its weaving according to geometrical
proportion in the order of warp and woof.
He also mentions bees:
Look
at the bee and the innumerable wonders of its gathering honey and [producing]
beeswax. We should like to make you aware of the geometry of its hive. It is
built on the figure of a hexagon so that the space [in the hive] may not be
insufficient for all the bees who crowd in one place in great numbers. If it
should circular hives, there would remain outside the hives an empty space since
circles do not pack contiguously. Likewise, are all other shapes. As to squares,
though they do pack contiguously, but the shape of the bee is inclined to
roundness and so inside the hive there would remain empty corners as in a
circular shape, there would be empty corners outside. Thus none of the figures
other than a hexagon approaches the circular figure [of the bee] in contiguity,
and this is known by geometrical proof. Consider, then, how God has guided the
bee to the characteristic of this figure.
Let us note that all varieties of bees
all over the world have been constructing hexagonal beehives whose apex angle is
always 70.5290.
Ibn Rush (Averroes) derives two
simplified arguments from the Qur’an: one a simplified cosmological argument
concluding that some entity must be responsible for the occurrence of events in
the world and, second, the teleological argument mentioned above (with reference
to the teleological verses) but in the following manner: The functionality
exhibited throughout the universe cannot conceivably be due to “chance”; it
must “perforce” be the doing of an “agent” who intends and wills it.
One can keep quoting ad
infinitum, for there exists a continuous chain of
scholars who have written on the subject: from Fakhr al-Din Razi, Baqillani to
Shahrastani¾all
have something to tell us.
Scientific Challenge to Evolution
But our age is more inclined to
understand scientific arguments and hence we close this inquiry by mentioning
one, out of hundreds and thousands that exist in nature and in our own selves.
These complex mechanisms clearly show the frailty of the so-called scientific
data upon which the case for Darwinism has always rested, along with the
“power” that has been given to this data for generating sweeping theories
that seek to redefine our notions about Origin.
The Optical Phenomena
We have chosen the optical phenomena
because it is one of those basic sciences which has always attracted human
interest and also because evolutionists have made it a point to attack this
marvelous construction.
We know that mirrors and burning lenses
date back as far as to the age of written records and Egyptian ophthalmologic
recipes go back at least to Papyrus
Ebers, copied before 1500 from considerable older
sources. We find advanced theories
of visual processes and of light in the oldest extent Greek philosophical works.
Thus vision, mankind’s “most noble sense” has been the subject of every
notable philosopher and practitioner of medicine since ancient times. The
Atomists had their theories of vision and so did Plato. For the former, and they
were by no means unanimous on it, vision required a material effluence to be
conveyed from the visible object to the eye.
Darwin was aware of the need to show
that “to suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for
adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of
light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have
been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest
degree.
But, he had an argument:
When it was said that the sun stood still
and the world turned round, the common sense of mankind declared the doctrine
false; but the old saying of Vox populi, vox Die, which every philosopher
knows, cannot be trusted in science. Reason tells me, that if numerous
gradations from a simple and imperfect eye to one complex and perfect can be
shown to exist, each grade being useful to its possessor, as is certainly the
case; if further, the eye ever varies and the variations be inherited, as is
likewise certainly the case; and if such variations should be useful to any
animal under changing conditions of life, then the difficulty of believing that
a perfect and complex eye could be formed by natural selection, though
insuperable by our imagination, should not be considered as subversive of the
theory. How a nerve comes to be sensitive to light, hardly concerns us more than
how life itself originated; but I may remark that, as some of the lowest
organisms, in which nerves cannot be detected, are capable of perceiving light,
it does not seem impossible that certain sensitive elements in their sarcode
should become aggregated and develop into nerves, endowed with this special
sensibility.
He then goes on construct his theory.
“The simplest organ which can be called an eye consists of an optic nerve,
surrounded by pigment-cells and covered by translucent skin, but without any
lens or other refractive body. We may, however, according to M. Jourdain,
descend even a step lower and find aggregates of pigment-cells, apparently
serving as organs of vision, and serve only to distinguish light from
darkness…”(p. 170) He was aware of the weakness of his ground and hence he
tried to pre-empt the objections:
It has been objected that in order to modify
the eye and still preserve it as a perfect instrument, many changes would have
to be effected simultaneously, which, it is assumed, could not be done through
natural selection; but as I have attempted to show in my work on the variation
of domestic animals, it is not necessary to suppose that the modifications were
all simultaneous if they were extremely slight and gradual… We must suppose
each new state of the instrument to be multiplied by the million; each to be
preserved until a better one is produced, and then the old ones to be all
destroyed. In living bodies, variations will cause the slight alterations,
generation will multiply them almost infinitely, and natural selection will pick
out with unerring skill each improvement.
Let us look at the biochemistry of
vision. Michael Behe has summed it in his Darwin’s
Black Box. This can be found any text book of
biochemistry: When light strikes the retina a photon reacts with a chemical
called 11-cis-retinal
which rearranges within picoseconds (about the time it takes light to travel the
breadth of a single human hair) to trans-retinal.
Notice that this change in the configuration is nothing but a flip in one of the
bonds of 11-cis-retinal
(Fig. 4), but this small flip is precisely what is needed to force a change in
the shape of protein, rhodopsin, to which the retinal is tightly bound.

Figure
4
: The First step in Vision, drawing not to scale.
This change in the structure of the
protein changes its behaviour and name; it is now called meta-rhodopsin II and
it now sticks to another protein called transducin which was previously tightly
bound to a small molecule called GDP. But when transducin interacts with meta-rhodopsin
II, the GDP falls off and a molecule called GTP binds to transducin.
GTP-transducin-meta-rhodopsin II now
binds to a protein called phosphodiesterase, located in the inner memberae of
the cell. This attachment gives phosphodiesterase the ability to chemically
lower the concentration of a molecule called cGMP. This reduction, in turn,
reduces the concentration of positively charged sodium ions in the cell, hence
causing an imbalance in the charge across the cell, which, finally, causes a
current to be transmitted across the cell membrane to the brain. The brain
interprets the signal and “vision occurs”.
But there is further fine tuning. If the
reactions just mentioned were to be allowed to proceed without further changes,
it is obvious that the supply of 11-cis-retinal,
cGMP and sodium ions would rapidly deplete. So, something has to turn off the
proteins that were turned on and restore the cell to its original state through
a highly complex mechanism (Fig. 5).
(i)
The ion chamber lets calcium ions into the cell; calcium is
pumped back out by a different protein, thus regulating its supply at a certain
concentration. When cGMP level falls, shutting down the ion channel, calcium ion
concentration decreases as well.
(ii)
The phophodiesterase enzyme, which destroys cGMP, slows down at lower
calcium concentrations.
(iii)
As soon as calcium concentration starts to fall, guanylate cyclase, a
protein, begins to synthesize cGMP
(iv)
While all this is going on, meta-rhodopsin II is chemically modified by
an enzyme called rhodopsin kinase. This modified rhodopsin then binds to a
protein known as arrestin, which prevents the rhodopsin from activating more
transducin. So the cell contains mechanisms to limit the amplified signal
started by a single photon.
(v)
Trans-retinal
eventually falls off of rhodopsin and must be reconverted to 11-cis-retinal
and again bound by rhodopsin to get back to the starting point for another
visual cycle. This is done by another interesting process in which an enzyme
modifies trans-retinal
to trans-retinol,
a molecule that contains two more hydrogen atoms, and a second enzyme then
converts the molecule to 11-cis-retinol.
(vi)
Finally, a third enzyme removes the previously added hydrogen atoms to
form 11-cis-retinal, thus
completing the cycle.

Figure
5
: Biochemistry of vision
This chemical insight takes us right to
the heart of the problem. The anatomy of the organs function in
relationship with a large number of chemical
changes, all of these highly complex and inter-related mechanisms could not be
merely the result of evolution of one or two anatomical structures by gradation,
as Darwin and neo-Darwinism has been claiming. There are hundreds of thousands
of irreducibly complex mechanisms of this nature that are operating in nature at
various levels. For them to have evolved over time, without design (and a
Designer) is simply absurd.
A Thought Experiment
Let us imagine that we are locked in a
room that has only one window near the ceiling. Let us further suppose that we
are sitting on a carpet on the floor. The window opens and a small green ball
drops on the carpet after every second. In one hundred seconds, we would have
collected one hundred green balls. But the next ball that drops is not green; it
is red. After this, the series of green balls resumes so that in the next one
hundred seconds, we have one hundred more green balls. And this is followed by
the red ball. At the end of 202 seconds, we would have collected 100 green + 1
red + 100 green +1 red balls. This can be represented by the following series:
1010g, 1r, 1010g,
1r...
where g= green ball and r=red ball
Now, let us suppose that this series of
one hundred green balls followed by one red ball repeats itself for one hundred
years. This would result in a staggering number of balls. For each one hundred
green balls, there would be one red ball. Assume that this pattern repeats
itself year after year with great regularity. This would be a convincing case
for a hypothesis that there exists in the unknown source of balls a pattern
defined by the series: 1010g, 1r, 1010g, 1r…
However, just when we have convinced
ourselves about the nature of the series of green and red balls, the ball that
appears at the end of the one hundredth year turns out to be blue and not red.
This would force us to redefine our series.
Now suppose that we observe this
phenomenon for another hundred years and the same pattern is followed. That is,
every 101th ball turns out to be red for each year except for the
centennial year, when instead of the red ball, we get a blue ball. After a long
period of observation, we would arrive at the conclusion that the invisible
source of balls has a pattern of one hundred green balls, followed by one red
ball and this pattern repeats itself year after year, except for the centennial
year when the odd ball is blue, instead of red.
As a last step in this thought
experiment, let us assume that this observation is found to be true for 999
years. But the odd blue ball in the millennial year is replaced by a yellow
ball. And let us further suppose that this pattern is observed for several
thousand years.
After thousands of years of observation,
we will deduce the following results:
1. Until we reach the first hundredth year,
we will remain convinced that the unknown source of balls has the following
pattern: 100 green balls, followed by one red ball.
2. After the first centenary ball appears to
be blue instead of red, we will become unsure about the pattern.
3. After 999 years, we will be working with
the hypothesis that there exist a pattern in the unknown source of balls which
is like this: 100 green balls, followed by one red ball for every year, except
for the centenary year when the red ball is blue.
4. When the blue centenary ball turns out to
be yellow at the end of the 1000th year, we will, once again, become
unsure about the pattern.
5. But after observing the process of
thousands of years, we will conclude that the pattern is actually defined by the
following series: 100 green balls, followed by one red ball for every year
except for the centenary year when the red ball is blue and except for the
millennial year when the odd ball is neither red nor blue, but it is yellow.
This thought experiment is actually a
variation of an old theme, which has echoed in various cultures, including the
Western, over many centuries. For
example, Charles Babbage (1792-1871), a mathematician and pioneer in the field
of calculating machines, used a similar model in an 1838 paper, “Argument in
Favour of Design”.
The conclusion Babbage draws is similar
to the one that we have just postulated: Babbage wrote: “In the present
chapter it is proposed to prove, that it is more probable that any law, at the
knowledge of which we have arrived by observation, shall be subject to one of
those violations which, according to Hume’s definition, constitutes a miracle,
than that it should not be so subjected.”
This experiment typifies the
contemporary Evolution/Creation debate. At each turn, we are confronted with
absolutely “convincing data” that attempts to prove one or the other theory
and just when we are ready to accept that theory as a fact, a ball of a
different colour arrives to upset the sequence.
But this is only one aspect of the difficulties we have to deal with.
There exist a number of other difficulties which deserve clarification.
Conclusion
In 1981, Professor Nasr stated the need
for a well-documented, contemporary response to evolution. “A complete
response requires concerted effort on the part of a large number of Islamic
thinkers working in harmony within the bosom of the Islamic tradition.”
In 1987, he mentioned in his Traditional
Islam in the Modern World, the trend among
modernized Muslims to accommodate evolution:
…usually
modernized Muslims have tried to come to terms with evolution through all kinds
of unbelievable interpretations of the Noble Qur’an, forgetting that there is
no possible way to harmonize the conception of man (Adam) as he to whom God
taught all the ‘names’ and whom He placed on earth as His Khalifah, and the
evolutionists conception which sees man as having ‘ascended’ from ape. It is
strange that except for a number of traditionalists and also
‘fundamentalist’ Muslim thinkers who have rejected the theory of evolution
mostly on purely religious grounds without providing intellectual and rational
arguments for their rejection of the theory, few Muslims have bothered to see
its logical absurdity and to consider all the scientific evidence brought
against it by such men as L. Bounoure and D. Dewar…
Let us mention in closing that evolution
is really a theory in crisis, even by its own methodologies. As for the
Qur’anic view of creation, let us recall that there is no specific a
time-frame mentioned in the creation verses; the traditional understanding of
the seven verses of the Qur’an (7:54; 10:3; 11:7; 25:59; 32:4; 50:38; 57:4)
that mention the creation in “six days” has always been an undetermined
time, known only to the creator. The commentators also mention that in Arabic,
the word Yom,
refers to both a day from sunrise to sunset as well as an era and the Qur’an
itself mentions multiple times (32:5; 70:4). Also, unlike the Biblical
narration, the Qur’an has no day of rest of God; He is beyond the need of
rest: “God,
there is no god but He, ¾the
Living, the Self-subsisting, no slumber can seize Him nor sleep; His are all
things in the heavens and on earth…”
However we see it, there exists a
transcendent perspective on life and cosmos in most ancient traditions. Seen
from this perspective, most of the contemporary discourse on evolution¾rooted
as it is in proliferation of theories, facts, and details¾would
seem to be an endless repetition of the same pattern¾a
repetition that does not add anything of real substance to the origin idea. This
is so because it is all based on a reversal of direction of inquiry, from lower
to the higher. In its very nature, existence has always been and always will be
rooted in a flow characterized by a movement from higher to the lower, from One
to the many and back to the One. No amount of quantification of data can change
this fundamental reality.
In sum, “the virtue of each thing,”
as Plato tells us, “whether body or soul, instrument or creature, does not
reach a high pitch of perfection by chance but as the result of the order and
truth and art which are imparted to them.”
It is an age-old aphorism that one
becomes identified with the object of one’s knowledge. For those who believe
the world emanates from God, has a design and purpose, and there is a way back
to God; for those who believe it to emanate from chaos, there is, likewise, a
way that corresponds with this possibility. Then
shall the dust return to the earth as it was; and the spirit shall unto God who
gave it.
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