A recent poll revealed that about half of Americans don’t “believe in evolution”. (Interestingly enough, a quarter of Americans believe that both evolution and creationism are correct.)

But such polls always make me wonder how they’re worded. “Evolution” is a very vague word that means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. I’d much prefer a different sort of poll where people were given statements like these and asked whether they agreed or disagreed with each one. I wonder if we’d see a considerably different picture of the American populace?

  • The earth is (at least) millions of years old
  • Life has been present on this earth for (at least) millions of years
  • Strata dating is generally accurate
  • Radiometric dating is generally accurate
  • Fossils of species show up in different eras of the fossil record,
    with more complex species appearing later
  • All life on earth is based on the same DNA=>RNA=>Protein transcription
    process
  • All change between generations within a species is due to mutation,
    crossing over, and similar DNA recombination (i.e. other theories such
    as Lamarckism [heritability of acquired characterists] are false)
  • Within a single species, there can be different “subspecies” which could
    interbreed but do typically not
  • The ability of subspecies to interbreed is not transitive; in other
    words, there exist subspecies A, B, and C such that A and B can
    interbreed, B and C can interbreed, but A and C cannot interbreed
  • Over time, two subspecies that could previously interbreed lose (for
    various reasons) the ability to interbreed and become different species
  • The more recently two species split, the more of their DNA they generally share
  • Vestigial structures (such as limbs on snakes and whales or degenerate
    eyes on cave-dwelling fish) give us clues to the ancestry of species
  • It is theoretically possible to explain all the complexity of life
    (e.g. eyes, bat sonar, etc.) through some process of genetic variation
    and selection
  • The theory currently with the most evidence that explains the origin
    of the species is that all species of life on the planet evolved from
    single-celled organisms

Do you “believe in evolution”? Are there any statements above that you disagree with?

2 Responses to “Do you believe in evolution?”

  1. Jacob says:

    Lamarckism is inherently false: I keep trying to put brains in my students, but they keep showing up without them. Clearly cellotaping a brain to a student does not provide future generations with brains.

    Okay, that joke was old as soon as I started making it. But you know what? I made it, and it’s here now. Take that!

  2. Jean Bodie says:

    Hi there,

    If I understood everything that you said about evolution I bet I would say yes, but unfortunately my brain has not evolved at the same rate as some other women’s because it was kept in a kind of prison where science was regarded as a truth that is ‘not very helpful:)’

    Jean

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