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WAS
THERE AN EVE?
by Sadaputa Dasa
In a 1987 article in the
prestigious journal Nature, three biochemists published a study of
mitochondrial DNA's from 147 people living on five continents. The
biochemists stated, "All these mitochondrial DNA's stem from one woman
who is postulated to have lived about 200,000 years ago, probably in
Africa."[1]
The story became a
sensation. The woman was called the African Eve, and Newsweek put her
on its cover. There she was -- the single ancestor of all living human
beings.
Eve was one in a population
of primitive human beings. But all human lineages not deriving from her
have perished. For students of human evolution, one important
implication of this finding was that Asian populations of Homo erectus,
including the famous Peking ape men, must not have been among our
ancestors. Those ape men couldn't have descended from Eve, it was
thought, because they lived in Asia before 200,000 years ago.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)
carries genetic instructions for the energy-making factories of human
cells. Unlike other genetic material, it is transmitted to offspring
only from the mother, with no contribution from the father. This means
that the descent of mtDNA makes a simple branching tree that is easy to
study.
Computer studies on the
sample of 147 people (who represent the world population) show that the
original ancestral trunk divided into two branches. Only Africans
descended from one branch. The rest of the population, as well as some
Africans, descended from the other. The inference was that the stem was
African. In 1991 another analysis of exact sequences from 189 people
confirmed this and indicated that Eve was roughly our ten-thousandth
great-grandmother.
Unfortunately, however, Eve
quickly fell down. In 1992 the geneticist Alan Templeton of Washington
University stated in the journal Science. "The inference that the tree
of humankind is rooted in Africa is not supported by the data."[2] It
seems that the African Eve theory evolved from errors in computer
analysis.
The ancestral trees had been
drawn from mtDNA sequences through what is called the principle of
parsimony. The figure below gives a rough idea of how this was done. To
create the figure, I used sequences of four letters to stand for the
genetic information in mtDNA. In (1) I started with abcd as the
original ancestor, and by making single changes, or mutations, I
produced descendants avcd and abud. Then from avcd I got two more
descendants, avcn and rvcd, again by single mutations.
avcn
rvcd
abud
avcn
rvcd abud
\
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/
\
\
/
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/
/
\
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/
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avcd
/
\
avud
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/
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/
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/
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/
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(1)
abcd
(2) avun
avcn
rvcd abud
\
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/
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/
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(3)
rbun
Let's suppose we are given
the sequences avcn, rvcd, and abud and we are asked to deduce their
ancestry. How would we go about this? The method used by the scientists
studying mtDNA was to say that ancestors and descendants should be as
similar as possible. One way to measure how similar they are is to
count the number of mutations from ancestor to descendant in the tree
of descent. A tree with few mutations shows high similarity, so it is a
good candidate for the real ancestral tree. Such a tree is said to be
parsimonious.
For example, tree (1) has
four mutations, and tree (3) has eight. Scientists would argue that (1)
is therefore more likely to resemble the real ancestral tree. This
seems promising, since in this case tree (1) is in fact the real tree.
But tree (2) requires five mutations, and so it is nearly as
parsimonious. Yet (2) shows a completely different pattern of ancestors.
The problem with the
parsimonious tree method is that in a complex case there are literally
millions of trees that are equally parsimonious. Searching through them
all on a mainframe computer can take months. According to Templeton,
the original findings on African Eve came from computer runs that
missed important trees. When further runs were made, a tree with
African roots turned out no more likely than one with European or Asian
roots.
The parsimonious tree method
rests on the idea that similar organisms should share close common
ancestors, and less similar organisms more distant ones. This idea is
the central motivating concept behind the theory of evolution. Since
the span of recorded human history is too short to show evolutionary
changes that mean very much, evolutionists are forced to reconstruct
the history of living species by comparing likenesses and differences
in living and fossil organisms.
For example, man and ape are
said to share a close common ancestor because man and ape are very
similar. In the late nineteenth century there was a famous debate
between the anatomists Thomas Huxley and Richard Owen over whether or
not human beings were cousins of apes. Owen maintained that they
weren't, because a feature of the human brain, the hippocampus major,
was not found in the brains of apes. But Huxley won the debate by
showing that apes really do have a hippocampus major. Before
triumphantly presenting his evidence for this to the British
Association of Science, Huxley had written to his wife, "By next Friday
evening they will all be convinced that they are monkeys."[3]
Of course, man and ape
really are similar. So if they don't descend from a close common
ancestor, how can one account for this? Biblical creationists propose
that God created man and ape separately by divine decree. To many
scientists this story seems unsatisfactory. The geneticist Francisco
Ayala indicated why in a discussion of the close likenesses between
human beings and chimpanzees. He remarked, "These creationists are
implying that God is a cheat, making things look identical when they
are not. I consider that to be blasphemous."[4] In other words, why
would God fake a record of apparent historical change?
To illustrate the idea
behind Ayala's comment, consider the legs of mammals. In all known land
mammals, the leg bones are homologous, or similar in form. Thus all
mammals have a recognizable thigh bone, shin bone, and so on. Now
imagine that genetic engineering becomes highly perfected. A genetic
engineer might want to create an animal with legs suitable for a
particular environment. But would he do this by simply modifying the
shapes of the standard mammalian leg bones to make another typical
mammalian leg? Why not create a whole new set of leg bones suitable for
the task at hand? And if human engineering might do this, why not God?
The answer that God's will is inscrutable doesn't sit well with many
scientists.
It is certainly not possible
to second guess the will of God. But the Vedic literature offers an
account of the origin of species that explains the patterns of
similarity among living organisms. According to the Srimad Bhagavatam,
living beings have descended, with modification, from an original
created being. All species, therefore, are linked by a family tree of
ancestors and descendants. Forms sharing similar features inherit those
features from ancestral forms that had them. So the theory given in the
Bhagavatam accounts for the likenesses and differences between species
in a way comparable to that of the theory of evolution.
But these two theories are
not the same. The neo-Darwinian theory of evolution says that species
descended from primitive one-celled
organisms and gradually developed into forms more and more complex. In
contrast, the Bhagavatam says that Brahma, the original created being,
is superhuman. Brahma generated beings called prajapatis, who are
inferior to him. These in turn produced generations of lesser beings,
culminating in plants, animals, and human beings as we know them. From
the prajapatis on down, these successive generations generally came
into being by sexual reproduction.
The theory of evolution says
that species have emerged by mutation and natural selection, with no
intelligent guidance. But the Bhagavatam maintains that the entire
process of generating species is planned in detail by God.
This point brings us back to
the question why species should be linked by patterns of homology.
Several points can be made.
The first is that the genetic engineer designing one special-purpose
mammal might find it convenient to introduce one special design. But if
he wanted to create an entire ecosystem of interacting organisms, he
might want to do it with a general scheme in which he could produce
different types of organisms by modifying standard plans. So
a standard mammalian plan could be used as the starting point for
producing various mammals, and similar plans could be used for birds,
fish, and so on. It would be most efficient to organize these plans
into a parsimonious tree to make short the design work needed.
This idea can overcome one
of the drawbacks of the theory of evolution. Many living organisms have
complex structures that evolutionists have a hard time accounting for
by mutations and natural selection. Observed intermediate forms linking
organisms that have these structures to those that don't are
notoriously lacking. Evolutionists have often found it hard to imagine
convincing possibilities for what these intermediate forms might be.
But the structures are easy to account for if we posit an intelligent
designer.
To illustrate this point,
consider the problem of writing computer programs. A programmer will
often write a new program by taking an old one and modifying it. After
doing this for a while, he winds up producing a family tree of
programs. But the changes required to go from one program to another
are often extensive. They're not the kind you'd be likely to get by
randomly zapping the first program with mutations and waiting to get a
new program that operates in the required way.
The point could be made,
however, that a finite human engineer may need efficient design methods
but God is unlimited and doesn't need them. Why then should He use
them? We can't second guess God, but a possible answer is waiting for
us to consider in the Bhagavatam (2.1.36). There Krsna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, is celebrated as the topmost artist:
Varieties of birds are
indications of His masterful artistic sense. Manu, the father of
mankind, is the emblem of His standard intelligence, and humanity is
His residence. The celestial species of human beings, like the
Gandharvas, Vidyadharas, Caranas, and Apsaras, all represent His
musical rhythm, and the demoniac soldiers are representations of His
wonderful prowess.
Orderly patterns of design
are also natural in artistic works. Just as Bach dexterously combines
and modifies different themes in his fugues, so the Supreme Artist may
orchestrate the world of life in a way that shows order, parsimony, and
luxuriant novelty of form. The patterns of parsimonious change follow
naturally from the procreation of species. The novelty flows from
Krsna's creative intelligence and cannot be accounted for by
neo-Darwinian theory.
This brings us to our last
point. The life forms descending from Brahma include many species
unknown to us. The higher species, beginning with Brahma himself, have
bodies made mostly of subtle types of energy distinct from the energies
studied in modern physics. Manu, the Gandharvas, and the Vidyadharas
are examples of such beings.
We may speak of the energies
studied by modern physics as gross matter. The bodies of ordinary
beings, animals, and plants are all made of this type of matter. If
they have descended from beings with bodies made of subtle energy, then
there must be a process of transformation whereby gross forms are
generated from subtle. Such a process, the Bhagavatam says, does in
fact exist.
So the Bhagavatam's
explanation of the origin of species makes the following two
predictions: (1) There should exist subtly embodied beings that include
the precursors of grossly embodied organisms, and (2) there should be a
process of generating gross form from subtle form. It would be
interesting to see if there is any empirical evidence that might
corroborate these predictions.
REFERENCES
[1] Rebecca Cann,
Mark Stoneking, and Allen Wilson, "Mitochondrial DNA and Human
Evolution," Nature, Vol. 325, January 1, 1987.
[2] Sharon Begley, "Eve takes another
Fall," Newsweek, 3/1/92.
[3] Wendt, 1972, p. 71.
[4] Joel Davis, "Blow to Creation
Myth," Omni, August, 1980.
Sadaputa Dasa (Richard L.
Thompson) earned his Ph.D. in mathematics from Cornell University. He
is the author of several books, of which the most recent is GOD
& SCIENCE - Divine Causation And the Laws of Nature.
Hopepage If you have any comments or questions contact: bhaktivedanta_108@yahoo.com |
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