Evolution
Human Origins
Intelligent Design
Human Speech as a Stumbling Block for Darwinism — Distilled to Five Minutes
Darwinian evolution accounts for adaptive features of organisms, or claims to do so. That is, it explains features that advance reproduction. With evolution, reproductive advantage is the name of the game. The theory chokes, however, on what is non-adaptive or “beyond-adaptive.”
We are still savoring Tom Wolfe’s takedown of evolution as an explanation of speech. But what Wolfe does in 169 pages in The Kingdom of Speech, our documentary short The Biology of the Baroque accomplishes even more succinctly. The video highlights the work and ideas of Discovery Institute biologist Michael Denton. Speech is the subject of the final five or six minutes. See it above (starts at 14:05).
Here is the challenge. Current thinking has modern humans arising 200,000 years ago, while the common ancestors of non-Africans exited Africa between 50,000 and 80,000 years ago in one migration. Humans around the globe share the same capacity both for speech and for abstract thought, which are the chief distinguishing features that set humans apart from other animals.
Despite the differences among languages of the world, any human can potentially learn any language. There is no special “gene” for German, Navajo, or Swahili. Similarly while individuals obviously differ in intelligence and creativity, these gifts are shared by every race and ethnicity. Thus it’s inescapable that by 80,000 years ago, humans had already developed these capacities. The potential for every human intellectual achievement was there in full.
The raw capacity for the highest expressions of language, as well as art, philosophy, religion, and science, were already baked in the cake at the time, waiting to come to fruition in diverse cultures long afterward. This is not “adaptive,” or “non-adaptive,” it’s “beyond-adaptive,” as we say in the film.
Dr. Denton notes that a hypothesis of intelligent design well accounts for such an observation. Design doesn’t pursue only the survival of the fittest. It can seed a gift in a population with a view to the future and what will come of it tens of thousands of years later. But confronted with human speech, Darwinian explanations absolutely stumble and fall.