http://www.icr.org, Evolutionary scientists do not know how the human brain's ability to
process language supposedly evolved from a non-speaking ancestor. Recent
technological advances have enabled scientists to explore this subject
in new ways, and one researcher's review reveals two flaws that underpin
the whole research effort.
The review article, published in a special supplementary edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, summarized the history of discovery and implications of a special gene named FOXP2.1 Researchers in 1990 found that specific mutations to FOXP2
caused a heritable speech defect in a family in England. The gene
produces a protein that clamps onto DNA to help regulate expression of
other genes.
Initially, evolutionists thought that a small change in this one gene
might have produced dramatic changes in humanity's supposed ape-like
ancestor's brain. For example, a 2002 report in Nature noted that the human-specific version of FOXP2 "may be pertinent with regard to the evolution of human language."2
Emery University's Todd Preuss wrote "As a gene associated with a human-specific trait [speech], FOXP2 would at first glance seem to be a dream come true for evolutionary geneticists."1 Could this be a language gene that explains how a human brain could have evolved from a chimp brain?
No. The high hope once held for FOXP2 as a key to explain the evolution of speech in the brain was dashed on the rocks of real research. Analyses of FOXP2
gene activity showed that it was not only used in brain tissues that
facilitate speech, but also in various tissues throughout the body with a
variety of uses. And a broad array of animals including all mammals,
birds, fish, reptiles, and alligators share an almost identical
gene—although none of those creatures talk like people.
This represents an overlooked flaw in the evolutionary research approach. Because FOXP2
turned out to be involved in many traits, its evolution by natural
selection is highly improbable. Supposedly, nature "sees" and "selects"
an individual with a certain trait. How, then, could a single natural
environment select multiple traits at once?3
Regardless, Preuss continued to assert that natural selection, not God,
designed organisms. He wrote of "whole-genome screens to identify genes
that underwent human-specific sequence changes as a result of
selection."1 Scientists can indirectly detect if selection
did not cause a gene. But if they weren't present in the past to observe
any changes, how can any researcher know that human-specific genes were
the result of selection or even that they were the result of any kind
of changes? More likely, the DNA differences existed from the beginning.
Preuss wrote, "In neither case, however, do we have a direct connection between language and the specific FOXP2 substitutions [mutations] that took place in human evolution."1
In other words, the gene does not directly connect to a trait that
nature could select. So how could nature select the human-specific
version of FOXP2 during "human evolution"?
The second flaw is the author's reliance on a logical fallacy to
support the concept of human evolution. It begs the question, which
occurs "when a person merely assumes what he or she is attempting to
prove."4 Thus, the 2002 Nature report begged the
question of evolution in their statement, "Our method suggests that the
fixation occurred during the last 200,000 years of human history."2 But the "method" the researchers used was force-fitting the FOXP2 sequence data into a diagram that assumes evolution.
Preuss and others did not mention—let alone test—the possibility that FOXP2
was purposely placed to serve multiple functions throughout many body
tissues in many creatures. Creation science, however, does not suffer
from either of the two flaws that characterized the FOXP2 investigation.
References
- Preuss, T. 2012. Human brain evolution: From gene discovery to phenotype discovery. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109 (Supplement 1): 10709-10716.
- Enard, W. et al. 2002. Molecular evolution of FOXP2, a gene involved in speech and language. Nature. 418 (6900): 869-872.
- Guliuzza, R. 2010. Natural Selection Is Not 'Nature's Design Process.' Acts & Facts. 39 (4): 10-11.
- Lisle, J. Logical Fallacies: The Fallacy of Begging the Question. Posted on answersingenesis.org August 17, 2009, accessed June 28, 2012.
* Mr. Thomas is Science Writer at the Institute for Creation Research.
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