Article in The Skeptic
Vol 18, No 4 Dec 1998
In September 1997, I allowed an Australian film crew into my house
in Oxford without realising that their purpose was creationist propaganda.
In the course of a suspiciously amateurish interview, they issued a truculent
challenge to me to "give an example of a genetic mutation or an evolutionary
process which can be seen to increase the information in the genome." It
is the kind of question only a creationist would ask in that way, and it
was at this point I tumbled to the fact that I had been duped into granting
an interview to creationists - a thing I normally don't do, for good reasons.
In my anger I refused to discuss the question further, and told them to stop
the camera. However, I eventually withdrew my peremptory termination of the
interview as a whole. This was solely because they pleaded with me that they
had come all the way from Australia specifically in order to interview me.
Even if this was a considerable exaggeration, it seemed, on reflection, ungenerous
to tear up the legal release form and throw them out. I therefore relented.
My generosity was rewarded in a fashion that anyone familiar with
fundamentalist tactics might have predicted. When I eventually saw the film
a year later 1,
I found that it had been edited to give the false impression that I was incapable
of answering the question about information content 2. In fairness, this may not have
been quite as intentionally deceitful as it sounds. You have to understand
that these people really believe that their question cannot
be answered! Pathetic as it sounds, their entire journey from Australia seems
to have been a quest to film an evolutionist failing to answer it.
With hindsight - given that I had been suckered into admitting them
into my house in the first place - it might have been wiser simply to answer
the question. But I like to be understood whenever I open my mouth - I have
a horror of blinding people with science - and this was not a question that
could be answered in a soundbite. First you first have to explain the technical
meaning of "information". Then the relevance to evolution, too, is
complicated - not really difficult but it takes time. Rather than engage
now in further recriminations and disputes about exactly what happened at
the time of the interview (for, to be fair, I should say that the Australian
producer's memory of events seems to differ from mine), I shall try to redress
the matter now in constructive fashion by answering the original question,
the "Information Challenge", at adequate length - the sort of length you
can achieve in a proper article.
Information
The technical definition of "information" was introduced by the
American engineer Claude Shannon in 1948. An employee of the Bell Telephone
Company, Shannon was concerned to measure information as an economic commodity.
It is costly to send messages along a telephone line. Much of what passes
in a message is not information: it is redundant. You could save
money by recoding the message to remove the redundancy. Redundancy was a
second technical term introduced by Shannon, as the inverse of information.
Both definitions were mathematical, but we can convey Shannon's intuitive
meaning in words.
Redundancy is any part of a message that is not informative, either
because the recipient already knows it (is not surprised by it) or because
it duplicates other parts of the message. In the sentence "Rover is a poodle
dog", the word "dog" is redundant because "poodle" already tells us that
Rover is a dog. An economical telegram would omit it, thereby increasing
the informative proportion of the message. "Arr JFK Fri pm pls mt BA Cncrd
flt" carries the same information as the much longer, but more redundant,
"I'll be arriving at John F Kennedy airport on Friday evening; please meet
the British Airways Concorde flight". Obviously the brief, telegraphic message
is cheaper to send (although the recipient may have to work harder to decipher
it - redundancy has its virtues if we forget economics). Shannon wanted to
find a mathematical way to capture the idea that any message could be broken
into the information (which is worth paying for), the redundancy
(which can, with economic advantage, be deleted from the message because,
in effect, it can be reconstructed by the recipient) and the noise
(which is just random rubbish).
"It rained in Oxford every day this week" carries relatively little
information, because the receiver is not surprised by it. On the other hand,
"It rained in the Sahara desert every day this week" would be a message with
high information content, well worth paying extra to send. Shannon wanted
to capture this sense of information content as "surprise value". It is related
to the other sense - "that which is not duplicated in other parts of the message"
- because repetitions lose their power to surprise. Note that Shannon's
definition of the quantity of information is independent of whether it is
true. The measure he came up with was ingenious and intuitively satisfying.
Let's estimate, he suggested, the receiver's ignorance or uncertainty before
receiving the message, and then compare it with the receiver's remaining
ignorance after receiving the message. The quantity of ignorance-reduction
is the information content. Shannon's unit of information is the bit,
short for "binary digit". One bit is defined as the amount of information
needed to halve the receiver's prior uncertainty, however great that prior
uncertainty was (mathematical readers will notice that the bit is, therefore,
a logarithmic measure).
In practice, you first have to find a way of measuring the prior
uncertainty - that which is reduced by the information when it comes. For
particular kinds of simple message, this is easily done in terms of probabilities.
An expectant father watches the Caesarian birth of his child through a window
into the operating theatre. He can't see any details, so a nurse has agreed
to hold up a pink card if it is a girl, blue for a boy. How much information
is conveyed when, say, the nurse flourishes the pink card to the delighted
father? The answer is one bit - the prior uncertainty is halved.
The father knows that a baby of some kind has been born, so his uncertainty
amounts to just two possibilities - boy and girl - and they are (for purposes
of this discussion) equal. The pink card halves the father's prior
uncertainty from two possibilities to one (girl). If there'd been no pink
card but a doctor had walked out of the operating theatre, shook the father's
hand and said "Congratulations old chap, I'm delighted to be the first to
tell you that you have a daughter", the information conveyed by the 17 word
message would still be only one bit.
Computer information
Computer information is held in a sequence of noughts and ones.
There are only two possibilities, so each 0 or 1 can hold one bit. The memory
capacity of a computer, or the storage capacity of a disc or tape, is often
measured in bits, and this is the total number of 0s or 1s that it can hold.
For some purposes, more convenient units of measurement are the byte (8 bits),
the kilobyte (1000 bytes or 8000 bits), the megabyte (a million bytes or
8 million bits) or the gigabyte (1000 million bytes or 8000 million bits).
Notice that these figures refer to the total available capacity. This is
the maximum quantity of information that the device is capable of storing.
The actual amount of information stored is something else. The capacity of
my hard disc happens to be 4.2 gigabytes. Of this, about 1.4 gigabytes are
actually being used to store data at present. But even this is not the true
information content of the disc in Shannon's sense. The true information
content is smaller, because the information could be more economically stored.
You can get some idea of the true information content by using one of those
ingenious compression programs like "Stuffit". Stuffit looks for redundancy
in the sequence of 0s and 1s, and removes a hefty proportion of it by recoding
- stripping out internal predictability. Maximum information content would
be achieved (probably never in practice) only if every 1 or 0 surprised us
equally. Before data is transmitted in bulk around the Internet, it is routinely
compressed to reduce redundancy.
That's good economics. But on the other hand it is also a good idea
to keep some redundancy in messages, to help correct errors. In a message
that is totally free of redundancy, after there's been an error there is
no means of reconstructing what was intended. Computer codes often incorporate
deliberately redundant "parity bits" to aid in error detection. DNA, too,
has various error-correcting procedures which depend upon redundancy. When
I come on to talk of genomes, I'll return to the three-way distinction between
total information capacity, information capacity actually used, and true
information content.
It was Shannon's insight that information of any kind, no matter
what it means, no matter whether it is true or false, and no matter by what
physical medium it is carried, can be measured in bits, and is translatable
into any other medium of information. The great biologist J B S Haldane used
Shannon's theory to compute the number of bits of information conveyed by
a worker bee to her hivemates when she "dances" the location of a food source
(about 3 bits to tell about the direction of the food and another 3 bits
for the distance of the food). In the same units, I recently calculated that
I'd need to set aside 120 megabits of laptop computer memory to store the
triumphal opening chords of Richard Strauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra"
(the "2001" theme) which I wanted to play in the middle of a lecture about
evolution. Shannon's economics enable you to calculate how much modem time
it'll cost you to e-mail the complete text of a book to a publisher in another
land. Fifty years after Shannon, the idea of information as a commodity,
as measurable and interconvertible as money or energy, has come into its
own.
DNA information
DNA carries information in a very computer-like way, and we can
measure the genome's capacity in bits too, if we wish. DNA doesn't use a
binary code, but a quaternary one. Whereas the unit of information in the
computer is a 1 or a 0, the unit in DNA can be T, A, C or G. If I tell you
that a particular location in a DNA sequence is a T, how much information
is conveyed from me to you? Begin by measuring the prior uncertainty. How
many possibilities are open before the message "T" arrives? Four. How many
possibilities remain after it has arrived? One. So you might think the information
transferred is four bits, but actually it is two. Here's why (assuming that
the four letters are equally probable, like the four suits in a pack of cards).
Remember that Shannon's metric is concerned with the most economical
way of conveying the message. Think of it as the number of yes/no questions
that you'd have to ask in order to narrow down to certainty, from an initial
uncertainty of four possibilities, assuming that you planned your questions
in the most economical way. "Is the mystery letter before D in the alphabet?"
No. That narrows it down to T or G, and now we need only one more question
to clinch it. So, by this method of measuring, each "letter" of the DNA has
an information capacity of 2 bits.
Whenever prior uncertainty of recipient can be expressed as a number
of equiprobable alternatives N, the information content of a message which
narrows those alternatives down to one is log2N
(the power to which 2 must be raised in order to yield the number of alternatives
N). If you pick a card, any card, from a normal pack, a statement of the
identity of the card carries log252, or 5.7
bits of information. In other words, given a large number of guessing games,
it would take 5.7 yes/no questions on average to guess the card, provided
the questions are asked in the most economical way. The first two questions
might establish the suit. (Is it red? Is it a diamond?) the remaining three
or four questions would successively divide and conquer the suit (is it a
7 or higher? etc.), finally homing in on the chosen card. When the prior
uncertainty is some mixture of alternatives that are not equiprobable, Shannon's
formula becomes a slightly more elaborate weighted average, but it is essentially
similar. By the way, Shannon's weighted average is the same formula as physicists
have used, since the nineteenth century, for entropy. The point has interesting
implications but I shall not pursue them here.
Information and evolution
That's enough background on information theory. It is a theory which
has long held a fascination for me, and I have used it in several of my research
papers over the years. Let's now think how we might use it to ask whether
the information content of genomes increases in evolution. First, recall the
three way distinction between total information capacity, the capacity that
is actually used, and the true information content when stored in the most
economical way possible. The total information capacity of the human genome
is measured in gigabits. That of the common gut bacterium Escherichia
coli is measured in megabits. We, like all other animals, are descended
from an ancestor which, were it available for our study today, we'd classify
as a bacterium. So perhaps, during the billions of years of evolution since
that ancestor lived, the information capacity of our genome has gone up about
three orders of magnitude (powers of ten) - about a thousandfold. This is
satisfyingly plausible and comforting to human dignity. Should human dignity
feel wounded, then, by the fact that the crested newt, Triturus cristatus,
has a genome capacity estimated at 40 gigabits, an order of magnitude larger
than the human genome? No, because, in any case, most of the capacity of the
genome of any animal is not used to store useful information. There are many
nonfunctional pseudogenes (see below) and lots of repetitive nonsense, useful
for forensic detectives but not translated into protein in the living cells.
The crested newt has a bigger "hard disc" than we have, but since the great
bulk of both our hard discs is unused, we needn't feel insulted. Related
species of newt have much smaller genomes. Why the Creator should have played
fast and loose with the genome sizes of newts in such a capricious way is
a problem that creationists might like to ponder. From an evolutionary point
of view the explanation is simple (see The Selfish Gene pp 44-45
and p 275 in the Second Edition).
Gene duplication
Evidently the total information capacity of genomes is very variable
across the living kingdoms, and it must have changed greatly in evolution,
presumably in both directions. Losses of genetic material are called deletions.
New genes arise through various kinds of duplication. This is well illustrated
by haemoglobin, the complex protein molecule that transports oxygen in the
blood.
Human adult haemoglobin is actually a composite of four protein
chains called globins, knotted around each other. Their detailed sequences
show that the four globin chains are closely related to each other, but they
are not identical. Two of them are called alpha globins (each a chain of
141 amino acids), and two are beta globins (each a chain of 146 amino acids).
The genes coding for the alpha globins are on chromosome 11; those coding
for the beta globins are on chromosome 16. On each of these chromosomes,
there is a cluster of globin genes in a row, interspersed with some junk
DNA. The alpha cluster, on Chromosome 11, contains seven globin genes. Four
of these are pseudogenes, versions of alpha disabled by faults in their sequence
and not translated into proteins. Two are true alpha globins, used in the
adult. The final one is called zeta and is used only in embryos. Similarly
the beta cluster, on chromosome 16, has six genes, some of which are disabled,
and one of which is used only in the embryo. Adult haemoglobin, as we've
seen contains two alpha and two beta chains.
Never mind all this complexity. Here's the fascinating point. Careful
letter-by-letter analysis shows that these different kinds of globin genes
are literally cousins of each other, literally members of a family. But these
distant cousins still coexist inside our own genome, and that of all vertebrates.
On a the scale of whole organism, the vertebrates are our cousins too. The
tree of vertebrate evolution is the family tree we are all familiar with,
its branch-points representing speciation events - the splitting of species
into pairs of daughter species. But there is another family tree occupying
the same timescale, whose branches represent not speciation events but gene
duplication events within genomes.
The dozen or so different globins inside you are descended from
an ancient globin gene which, in a remote ancestor who lived about half a
billion years ago, duplicated, after which both copies stayed in the genome.
There were then two copies of it, in different parts of the genome of all
descendant animals. One copy was destined to give rise to the alpha cluster
(on what would eventually become Chromosome 11 in our genome), the other
to the beta cluster (on Chromosome 16). As the aeons passed, there were further
duplications (and doubtless some deletions as well). Around 400 million years
ago the ancestral alpha gene duplicated again, but this time the two copies
remained near neighbours of each other, in a cluster on the same chromosome.
One of them was destined to become the zeta of our embryos, the other became
the alpha globin genes of adult humans (other branches gave rise to the nonfunctional
pseudogenes I mentioned). It was a similar story along the beta branch of
the family, but with duplications at other moments in geological history.
Now here's an equally fascinating point. Given that the split between
the alpha cluster and the beta cluster took place 500 million years ago,
it will of course not be just our human genomes that show the split - possess
alpha genes in a different part of the genome from beta genes. We should see
the same within-genome split if we look at any other mammals, at birds, reptiles,
amphibians and bony fish, for our common ancestor with all of them lived
less than 500 million years ago. Wherever it has been investigated, this
expectation has proved correct. Our greatest hope of finding a vertebrate
that does not share with us the ancient alpha/beta split would be a jawless
fish like a lamprey, for they are our most remote cousins among surviving
vertebrates; they are the only surviving vertebrates whose common ancestor
with the rest of the vertebrates is sufficiently ancient that it could have
predated the alpha/beta split. Sure enough, these jawless fishes are the
only known vertebrates that lack the alpha/beta divide.
Gene duplication, within the genome, has a similar historic
impact to species duplication ("speciation") in phylogeny. It is responsible
for gene diversity, in the same way as speciation is responsible for phyletic
diversity. Beginning with a single universal ancestor, the magnificent diversity
of life has come about through a series of branchings of new species, which
eventually gave rise to the major branches of the living kingdoms and the
hundreds of millions of separate species that have graced the earth. A similar
series of branchings, but this time within genomes - gene duplications -
has spawned the large and diverse population of clusters of genes that constitutes
the modern genome.
The story of the globins is just one among many. Gene duplications
and deletions have occurred from time to time throughout genomes. It is by
these, and similar means, that genome sizes can increase in evolution. But
remember the distinction between the total capacity of the whole genome, and
the capacity of the portion that is actually used. Recall that not all the
globin genes are actually used. Some of them, like theta in the alpha cluster
of globin genes, are pseudogenes, recognizably kin to functional genes in
the same genomes, but never actually translated into the action language
of protein. What is true of globins is true of most other genes. Genomes
are littered with nonfunctional pseudogenes, faulty duplicates of functional
genes that do nothing, while their functional cousins (the word doesn't even
need scare quotes) get on with their business in a different part of the
same genome. And there's lots more DNA that doesn't even deserve the name
pseudogene. It, too, is derived by duplication, but not duplication of functional
genes. It consists of multiple copies of junk, "tandem repeats", and other
nonsense which may be useful for forensic detectives but which doesn't seem
to be used in the body itself.
Once again, creationists might spend some earnest time speculating
on why the Creator should bother to litter genomes with untranslated pseudogenes
and junk tandem repeat DNA.
Information in the genome
Can we measure the information capacity of that portion of the genome
which is actually used? We can at least estimate it. In the case of the human
genome it is about 2% - considerably less than the proportion of my hard
disc that I have ever used since I bought it. Presumably the equivalent figure
for the crested newt is even smaller, but I don't know if it has been measured.
In any case, we mustn't run away with a chaunvinistic idea that the human
genome somehow ought to have the largest DNA database because we are so wonderful.
The great evolutionary biologist George C Williams has pointed out that animals
with complicated life cycles need to code for the development of all stages
in the life cycle, but they only have one genome with which to do so. A butterfly's
genome has to hold the complete information needed for building a caterpillar
as well as a butterfly. A sheep liver fluke has six distinct stages in its
life cycle, each specialised for a different way of life. We shouldn't feel
too insulted if liver flukes turned out to have bigger genomes than we have
(actually they don't).
Remember, too, that even the total capacity of genome that is actually
used is still not the same thing as the true information content in Shannon's
sense. The true information content is what's left when the redundancy has
been compressed out of the message, by the theoretical equivalent of Stuffit.
There are even some viruses which seem to use a kind of Stuffit-like compression.
They make use of the fact that the RNA (not DNA in these viruses, as it happens,
but the principle is the same) code is read in triplets. There is a "frame"
which moves along the RNA sequence, reading off three letters at a time.
Obviously, under normal conditions, if the frame starts reading in the wrong
place (as in a so-called frame-shift mutation), it makes total nonsense:
the "triplets" that it reads are out of step with the meaningful ones. But
these splendid viruses actually exploit frame-shifted reading. They get two
messages for the price of one, by having a completely different message embedded
in the very same series of letters when read frame-shifted. In principle
you could even get three messages for the price of one, but I don't know whether
there are any examples.
Information in the body
It is one thing to estimate the total information capacity of a
genome, and the amount of the genome that is actually used, but it's harder
to estimate its true information content in the Shannon sense. The best we
can do is probably to forget about the genome itself and look at its product,
the "phenotype", the working body of the animal or plant itself. In 1951,
J W S Pringle, who later became my Professor at Oxford, suggested using a
Shannon-type information measure to estimate "complexity". Pringle wanted
to express complexity mathematically in bits, but I have long found
the following verbal form helpful in explaining his idea to students.
We have an intuitive sense that a lobster, say, is more complex
(more "advanced", some might even say more "highly evolved") than another
animal, perhaps a millipede. Can we measure something in order to
confirm or deny our intuition? Without literally turning it into bits, we
can make an approximate estimation of the information contents of the two
bodies as follows. Imagine writing a book describing the lobster. Now write
another book describing the millipede down to the same level of detail. Divide
the word-count in one book by the word-count in the other, and you have an
approximate estimate of the relative information content of lobster and millipede.
It is important to specify that both books describe their respective animals
"down to the same level of detail". Obviously if we describe the millipede
down to cellular detail, but stick to gross anatomical features in the case
of the lobster, the millipede would come out ahead.
But if we do the test fairly, I'll bet the lobster book would come
out longer than the millipede book. It's a simple plausibility argument,
as follows. Both animals are made up of segments - modules of bodily architecture
that are fundamentally similar to each other, arranged fore-and-aft like
the trucks of a train. The millipede's segments are mostly identical to each
other. The lobster's segments, though following the same basic plan (each
with a nervous ganglion, a pair of appendages, and so on) are mostly different
from each other. The millipede book would consist of one chapter describing
a typical segment, followed by the phrase "Repeat N times" where N is the
number of segments. The lobster book would need a different chapter for each
segment. This isn't quite fair on the millipede, whose front and rear end
segments are a bit different from the rest. But I'd still bet that, if anyone
bothered to do the experiment, the estimate of lobster information content
would come out substantially greater than the estimate of millipede information
content.
It's not of direct evolutionary interest to compare a lobster with
a millipede in this way, because nobody thinks lobsters evolved from millipedes.
Obviously no modern animal evolved from any other modern animal. Instead,
any pair of modern animals had a last common ancestor which lived at some
(in principle) discoverable moment in geological history. Almost all of evolution
happened way back in the past, which makes it hard to study details. But
we can use the "length of book" thought-experiment to agree upon what it
would mean to ask the question whether information content increases over
evolution, if only we had ancestral animals to look at.
The answer in practice is complicated and controversial, all bound
up with a vigorous debate over whether evolution is, in general, progressive.
I am one of those associated with a limited form of yes answer. My colleague
Stephen Jay Gould tends towards a no answer. I don't think anybody would deny
that, by any method of measuring - whether bodily information content, total
information capacity of genome, capacity of genome actually used, or true
("Stuffit compressed") information content of genome - there has been a broad
overall trend towards increased information content during the course of
human evolution from our remote bacterial ancestors. People might disagree,
however, over two important questions: first, whether such a trend is to
be found in all, or a majority of evolutionary lineages (for example parasite
evolution often shows a trend towards decreasing bodily complexity, because
parasites are better off being simple); second, whether, even in lineages
where there is a clear overall trend over the very long term, it is bucked
by so many reversals and re-reversals in the shorter term as to undermine
the very idea of progress. This is not the place to resolve this interesting
controversy. There are distinguished biologists with good arguments on both
sides.
Supporters of "intelligent design" guiding evolution, by the way,
should be deeply committed to the view that information content increases
during evolution. Even if the information comes from God, perhaps especially
if it does, it should surely increase, and the increase should presumably
show itself in the genome. Unless, of course - for anything goes in such addle-brained
theorising - God works his evolutionary miracles by nongenetic means.
Perhaps the main lesson we should learn from Pringle is that the
information content of a biological system is another name for its complexity.
Therefore the creationist challenge with which we began is tantamount to
the standard challenge to explain how biological complexity can evolve from
simpler antecedents, one that I have devoted three books to answering (The
Blind Watchmaker, River Out of Eden, Climbing Mount Improbable) and
I do not propose to repeat their contents here. The "information challenge"
turns out to be none other than our old friend: "How could something as complex
as an eye evolve?" It is just dressed up in fancy mathematical language -
perhaps in an attempt to bamboozle. Or perhaps those who ask it have already
bamboozled themselves, and don't realise that it is the same old - and thoroughly
answered - question.
The Genetic Book of the Dead
Let me turn, finally, to another way of looking at whether the information
content of genomes increases in evolution. We now switch from the broad sweep
of evolutionary history to the minutiae of natural selection. Natural selection
itself, when you think about it, is a narrowing down from a wide initial
field of possible alternatives, to the narrower field of the alternatives
actually chosen. Random genetic error (mutation), sexual recombination and
migratory mixing, all provide a wide field of genetic variation: the available
alternatives. Mutation is not an increase in true information content, rather
the reverse, for mutation, in the Shannon analogy, contributes to increasing
the prior uncertainty. But now we come to natural selection, which reduces
the "prior uncertainty" and therefore, in Shannon's sense, contributes information
to the gene pool. In every generation, natural selection removes the less
successful genes from the gene pool, so the remaining gene pool is a narrower
subset. The narrowing is nonrandom, in the direction of improvement, where
improvement is defined, in the Darwinian way, as improvement in fitness to
survive and reproduce. Of course the total range of variation is topped up
again in every generation by new mutation and other kinds of variation. But
it still remains true that natural selection is a narrowing down from an
initially wider field of possibilities, including mostly unsuccessful ones,
to a narrower field of successful ones. This is analogous to the definition
of information with which we began: information is what enables the narrowing
down from prior uncertainty (the initial range of possibilities) to later
certainty (the "successful" choice among the prior probabilities). According
to this analogy, natural selection is by definition a process whereby
information is fed into the gene pool of the next generation.
If natural selection feeds information into gene pools, what is
the information about? It is about how to survive. Strictly it is
about how to survive and reproduce, in the conditions that prevailed when
previous generations were alive. To the extent that present day conditions
are different from ancestral conditions, the ancestral genetic advice will
be wrong. In extreme cases, the species may then go extinct. To the extent
that conditions for the present generation are not too different from conditions
for past generations, the information fed into present-day genomes from past
generations is helpful information. Information from the ancestral
past can be seen as a manual for surviving in the present: a family bible
of ancestral "advice" on how to survive today. We need only a little poetic
licence to say that the information fed into modern genomes by natural selection
is actually information about ancient environments in which ancestors survived.
This idea of information fed from ancestral generations into descendant
gene pools is one of the themes of my new book, Unweaving the Rainbow.
It takes a whole chapter, "The Genetic Book of the Dead", to develop the
notion, so I won't repeat it here except to say two things. First, it is
the whole gene pool of the species as a whole, not the genome of any particular
individual, which is best seen as the recipient of the ancestral information
about how to survive. The genomes of particular individuals are random samples
of the current gene pool, randomised by sexual recombination. Second, we
are privileged to "intercept" the information if we wish, and "read" an animal's
body, or even its genes, as a coded description of ancestral worlds. To quote
from Unweaving the Rainbow: "And isn't it an arresting thought?
We are digital archives of the African Pliocene, even of Devonian seas; walking
repositories of wisdom out of the old days. You could spend a lifetime reading
in this ancient library and die unsated by the wonder of it."
1 The producers never
deigned to send me a copy: I completely forgot about it until an American
colleague called it to my attention.
2 See Barry Williams
(1998): "Creationist
Deception Exposed", The Skeptic 18, 3, pp 7-10, for an
account of how my long pause (trying to decide whether to throw them out)
was made to look like hesitant inability to answer the question, followed
by an apparently evasive answer to a completely different question.
Christine
DeBlase-Ballstadt
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