New York/Region Opinions
Editorial Observer
Grasping the Depth of Time as a
First Step in Understanding Evolution
By VERLYN KLINKENBORG
Published: August 23, 2005
Last month a team of paleontologists
announced that it had found several fossilized dinosaur embryos that were 190
million years old - some 90 million years older than any dinosaur embryos found
so far. Those kinds of numbers are always a little daunting. Ever since I was a
boy in a public elementary school in Iowa, I've been learning to face the eons
and eons that are embedded in the universe around us.
I know the numbers as they stand at present, and I know what
they mean, in a roughly comparative way. The universe is perhaps 14 billion
years old. Earth is some 4.5 billion years old. The oldest hominid fossils are
between 6 million and 7 million years old. The oldest distinctly modern human
fossils are about 160,000 years old.
The truth of these numbers has the same
effect on me as watching the night sky in the high desert. It fills me with a
sense of nonspecific immensity. I don't think I'm alone in this.
One of the
most powerful limits to the human imagination is our inability to grasp, in a
truly intuitive way, the depths of terrestrial and cosmological time. That
inability is hardly surprising because our own lives are so very short in
comparison. It's hard enough to come to terms with the brief scale of human
history. But the difficulty of comprehending what time is on an evolutionary
scale, I think, is a major impediment to understanding evolution.
It's been
approximately 3.5 billion years since primeval life first originated on this
planet. That is not an unimaginable number in itself, if you're thinking of
simple, discrete units like dollars or grains of sand. But 3.5 billion years of
biological history is different. All those years have really passed, moment by
moment, one by one. They encompass an actual, already lived reality,
encompassing all the lives of all the organisms that have come and gone in that
time. That expanse of time defines the realm of biological possibility in which
life in its extraordinary diversity has evolved. It is time that has allowed
the making of us.
The idea of such quantities of time is extremely new. Humans
began to understand the true scale of geological time in the early 19th
century. The probable depth of cosmological time and the extent of the history
of the human species have come to light only within our own lifetimes.
That is
a lot to absorb and, not surprisingly, many people refuse to absorb it. Nearly
every attack on evolution - whether it is called intelligent design or plain
creationism, synonyms for the same faith-based rejection of evolution -
ultimately requires a foreshortening of cosmological, geological and biological
time.
Humans feel much more content imagining a world of more human
proportions, with a shorter time scale and a simple narrative sense of cause
and effect. But what we prefer to believe makes no difference. The fact that
life on Earth has arrived at a point where it is possible for humans to have
beliefs is due to the steady ticking away of eons and the trial and error of
natural selection.
Evolution is a robust theory, in the scientific sense, that
has been tested and confirmed again and again. Intelligent design is not a
theory at all, as scientists understand the word, but a well-financed political
and religious campaign to muddy science. Its basic proposition - the
intervention of a designer, a k a God - cannot be tested. It has no evidence to
offer, and its assumptions that humans were divinely created are the same as
its conclusions. Its objections to evolution are based on syllogistic reasoning
and a highly selective treatment of the physical evidence.
Accepting the fact of
evolution does not necessarily mean discarding a personal faith in God. But
accepting intelligent design means discarding science. Much has been made of a
2004 poll showing that some 45 percent of Americans believe that the Earth -
and humans with it - was created as described in the book of Genesis, and
within the past 10,000 years. This isn't a triumph of faith. It's a failure of
education.
The purpose of the campaign for intelligent design is to deepen that
failure. To present the arguments of intelligent design as part of a debate
over evolution is nonsense. From the scientific perspective, there is no
debate. But even the illusion of a debate is a sorry victory for
antievolutionists, a public relations victory based, as so many have been in
recent years, on ignorance and obfuscation.
The essential, but often
well-disguised, purpose of intelligent design, is to preserve the myth of a
separate, divine creation for humans in the belief that only that can explain
who we are. But there is a destructive hubris, a fearful arrogance, in that myth.
It sets us apart from nature, except to dominate it. It misses both the grace
and the moral depth of knowing that humans have only the same stake, the same
right, in the Earth as every other creature that has ever lived here. There is
a righteousness - a responsibility - in the deep, ancestral origins we share
with all of life.