HomeHistory BooksDARWIN'S BLACK BOX: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution
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DARWIN'S BLACK BOX: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution

hardcoverAugust 2, 1996
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ISBN-13: 9780684827544 ISBN-10: 0684827549
Publisher
Free Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
August 2, 1996
Weight
1.3 lbs
Dimensions
24.80×2.50×17.10 cm

About this book

DARWIN'S BLACK BOX: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution by Behe, Michael J.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780684827544.

Virtually all serious scientists accept the truth of Darwins theory of evolution. While the fight for its acceptance has been a long and difficult one, after a century of struggle among the cognoscenti the battle is over. Biologists are now confident that their remaining questions, such as how life on Earth began, or how the Cambrian explosion could have produced so many new species in such a short time, will be found to have Darwinian answers. They, like most of the rest of us, accept Darwins theory to be true. But should we? What would happen if we found something that radically challenged the now-accepted wisdom? In Darwins Black Box, Michael Behe argues that evidence of evolutions limits has been right under our noses -- but it is so small that we have only recently been able to see it. The field of biochemistry, begun when Watson and Crick discovered the double-helical shape of DNA, has unlocked the secrets of the cell. There, biochemists have unexpectedly discovered a world of Lilliputian complexity. As Behe engagingly demonstrates, using the examples of vision, bloodclotting, cellular transport, and more, the biochemical world comprises an arsenal of chemical machines, made up of finely calibrated, interdependent parts. For Darwinian evolution to be true, there must have been a series of mutations, each of which produced its own working machine, that led to the complexity we can now see. The more complex and interdependent each machines parts are shown to be, the harder it is to envision Darwins gradualistic paths, Behe surveys the professional science literature and shows that it is completely silent on the subject, stymied by the elegance of the foundation of life. Could it be that there is some greater force at work? Michael Behe is not a creationist. He believes in the scientific method, and he does not look to religious dogma for answers to these questions. But he argues persuasively that biochemical machines must have been designed -- either by God, or by some other higher intelligence. For decades science has been frustrated, trying to reconcile the astonishing discoveries of modern biochemistry to a nineteenth-century theory that cannot accommodate them. With the publication of Darwins Black Box, it is time for scientists to allow themselves to consider exciting new possibilities, and for the rest of us to watch closely.