There is much more to say.  For instance, I would like to challenge both the conservative “all is well” team and the “reform” team to justify the premise that evolutionary biology has, or should have, a grand unifying theory.  Why?  Physics does not have a grand unifying theory, though there is an ongoing search. Chemistry does not have a grand unifying theory.  Is there something wrong with that?  I fear that Mayr and his cohort created a false impression.  So far as I can see, the Modern Synthesis was a grand unifying theory for a few weeks some time in 1959, between the moment that unity was declared by Mayr and his exclusive self-appointed cohort at a Darwin centennial (utterly unlike the 1909 Cambridge celebration, which welcomed diverse views), and the launch of the molecular evolution revolution with Anfinsen’s The Molecular Basis of Evolution (1959).  In the 1960’s and 1970’s they were still congratulating themselves for having “unified biology”, and at exactly the same time, Mayr, Simpson and Stebbins were writing papers trying to beat back the lessons of comparative sequence analysis, claiming that “molecular” evolution is unimportant and shows only a superficial view, a view of the “proximate” causes of evolution.  They established the mainstream view that there is not one kind of evolution, but two kinds— “evolution” and “molecular evolution”—, only one of which is covered by the MS.  The molecular evolutionists had to start their own journals.  So much for theoretical unification.  There was literally a schism in evolutionary biology for 30 years.

We can credit Mayr and his cohort with creating a unified discipline of evolutionary biology complete with journals, meetings, sacred texts, core doctrines, heresies, founding fathers, etc.  As organizers and empire-builders, they clearly succeeded.  As theorizers, however, they distorted and dismissed alternative views, succumbed to political ideologies, and exaggerated evidence, all in the service of establishing an orthodoxy.  Conservatives, why are you defending the work of these zealots?  Reformers, why are you trying to emulate their hollow victory?

But let’s think about how to make the next debate a real debate on a scientific (not meta-scientific) proposition.   There are prominent evolutionary biologists (e.g., Lynch, Charlesworth, Coyne) who believe that alternatives to the gene-centric view are bunk, and have said so in print.  Why didn’t Nature ask these people to argue the “all is well” side?  Here are some suggestions for specific propositions:

  • Proposition: evolutionary causes are population-genetic causes; population genetics is the language of evolutionary causation (Lynch, et al are obviously on the “pro” side, while Pigliucci or Laland, et al would be on the “con” side)
  • Proposition: the results of research on molecular evolution and microbial genomics do not merely extend, but contradict the Modern Synthesis (Nei, Koonin, and others are clearly on the “pro” side, while the “con” side is mainstream)
  • Proposition: mutation is not random in the sense required for the Modern Synthesis to be a sufficient theory of evolution (a wide array of evolutionary biologists who study mutation would take the “pro” position, while the “con” position is mainstream)

Let’s hope that the next great debate is a real scientific debate, between people who actually disagree.

Notes

[1] Koonin edited a Frontiers issue with the theme that microbial genomics challenge Darwinian ideas (http://journal.frontiersin.org/ResearchTopic/518).  The LinkedIn discussion (you have to be signed in to see this, I think) went on for months and was mostly about people getting upset at the idea of Darwin being challenged, with me explaining again and again that yes, there are actual doctrines associated with Darwinism, e.g., gradualism, that are contradicted by results of microbial genomics, and that are still debated, with some scientists defending gradualism and others rejecting it.

[2] It’s relatively easy to apply for conference session and get accepted for a short talk, but actual invitations are rare.  For the record, I’ve never been asked to give a keynote address.   In 15 years of working on mutation-biased evolution and producing work that IMHO has far-reaching implications basic enough to be in textbooks, I’ve been invited to speak on this work exactly twice (thanks to Mike Lynch and Dmitri Petrov).   I don’t want to suggest that there is some kind of suppression going on.  Conferences have to be organized around familiar themes, and advertise speakers with recognized names, otherwise attendance will be low and the meeting will be a failure.  Conference organizers aim to advance science by bringing people together, but their strategy is to cover relevant fields and problem areas, not to give a platform to oddballs and misfits.  Minority positions get recognized if they satisfy someone’s search image, or if they are part of a recognizable camp.  When I worked on intron evolution (before I got bored with that topic and stopped), I satisfied people’s search image of “introns-late proponent”, and was invited numerous times to speak at small meetings or in conference sessions, including one small meeting where I squared off with a Nobel-prize-winning biochemist who was a prominent proponent of “introns-early.”  On the topic of mutation-biased evolution, I’m an army of one, so I suppose I shouldn’t expect much time on the stage.

[3] Mayr actually allowed room for neutralism, but only as a kind of superficial phenomenon, as per the schism mentioned further below.

[4]  The “MS has evolved” claim draws on an ambiguity between two different kinds of is_a relation, one based on ancestry, and another based on class membership.  This is the source of all the fun when evolutionary biologists say that birds are dinosaurs.  We do not say this with the intention of tricking people into thinking that birds and dinosaurs are the same thing; we do not say it with the intention of hiding the fact that only some dinosaurs evolved by a series of changes into something rather different.  To the contrary, when we say “birds are dinosaurs” we aim to provoke questions, precisely so that we can explain the difference between patrimony and similarity.   I wish that advocates of the “MS has evolved” argument were eager to explain this distinction rather than to obscure it.  One could argue that airplanes evolved from bicycles in the shop of the Wright brothers: however, to say that airplanes are bicycles explains little and misleads much.