A new article on the fundamental and severe problem of form in biology, especially Darwinist evolutionary biology and embryology, at http://natureinstitute.org/txt/st/bk/form1.htm .
An example: experimenters excised the normally developed amphibian lens right after it formed. Then they observed that somehow the organism apparently intelligently and creatively proceeded to form a new lens from some of the iris cells (an entirely different type of differentiated cell).
The problem of form extends very severely into evolutionary biology, since one of the greatest (unmentionable and embarrassing) inherent problems of Darwinist evolutionary theory is its utter inability to account for the evolution of new, innovative and complex forms.
Rupert Sheldrake’s hypothesized “morphic (or morphogenetic) fields” seem at least on the surface to somewhat account for the embryological mystery covered in the article, but don’t seem to relate too much to the problem with Darwinism and the evident creativity of evolution in rapidly creating complex and ingenious new forms at various points in the process. And I don’t think Sheldrake’s hypothesized biological phenomenon has ever been actually physically detected and studied.
This seems clearly to point once more to the bankruptcy of the reductionist materialist naturalism paradigm of modern science. It doesn’t look too likely that any progress will be made in solving the mystery of form until this paradigm is overthrown. I won’t hold my breath.
(This post was last modified: 2020-06-25, 05:50 PM by nbtruthman.)
An example: experimenters excised the normally developed amphibian lens right after it formed. Then they observed that somehow the organism apparently intelligently and creatively proceeded to form a new lens from some of the iris cells (an entirely different type of differentiated cell).
Quote:“It is impossible to believe that these complex and intricately coordinated responses to the (experimentally induced) loss of the lens were somehow already physically determined or programmed or otherwise specified in the animal’s one-celled zygote. Nor is it easy to imagine how there could ever have been a sustained and large population of lens-injured amphibians with otherwise functional eyes — a population large enough, that is, to enable a supposedly mindless process of natural selection to evolve a specific, novel solution to the problem of lens regeneration.
The problem of form exists even at the molecular level. The problem of form has long been central to biology…
………………………
…every organism’s stunning achievement of form has become an enigma so profound, and so threatening to the prevailing style of biological explanation, that few biologists dare to focus for long on the substance of the problem.”
The problem of form extends very severely into evolutionary biology, since one of the greatest (unmentionable and embarrassing) inherent problems of Darwinist evolutionary theory is its utter inability to account for the evolution of new, innovative and complex forms.
Rupert Sheldrake’s hypothesized “morphic (or morphogenetic) fields” seem at least on the surface to somewhat account for the embryological mystery covered in the article, but don’t seem to relate too much to the problem with Darwinism and the evident creativity of evolution in rapidly creating complex and ingenious new forms at various points in the process. And I don’t think Sheldrake’s hypothesized biological phenomenon has ever been actually physically detected and studied.
This seems clearly to point once more to the bankruptcy of the reductionist materialist naturalism paradigm of modern science. It doesn’t look too likely that any progress will be made in solving the mystery of form until this paradigm is overthrown. I won’t hold my breath.