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Biologists Take a Hatchet to Tree of Life, Biology Keeps Going Anyway

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The things you see on Twitter… Stephen Jackson is a microbiologist at University College Cork (UCC) in Ireland. Last week, UCC held a one-day meeting on microbial evolution, and the opening talk was given by Professor James McInerney of the University of Nottingham. I’ve paid close attention to McInerney’s work for many years, given his interest in processes of horizontal gene transfer and their possible influence on reconstructing the early history of life.

Well, McInerney then went after a central evolutionary pillar — what Jackson (in a pair of tweets) called a “near-dogmatic assumption” — namely, the Tree of Life rooted in LUCA, the Last Universal Common Ancestor:

About “non-triplet codons,” this is the paper he was referring to: “Nontriplet feature of genetic code in Euplotesciliates is a result of neutral evolution,” in PNAS.

“Design” and “Evolution” 

To gain a deeper understanding of McInerney’s skepticism about the Tree of Life, watch this fascinating YouTube presentation from September 2022 — especially the Q&A, which starts at about 47:00. McInerney quips that it’s never a good idea to combine “design” and “evolution,” signaling the doubt he shares with most of his evolutionary colleagues that intelligent design will contribute anything of value to biological knowledge.

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But McInerney’s joke about ID also shows that one need not be design-motivated to question the Tree of Life topology. Early in his presentation, McInerney says that he hopes to persuade his audience that this familiar LUCA-based hypothesis “has been falsified.” But most striking is McInerney’s enthusiasm for the fruitfulness of other approaches to genomic data, demonstrating that biological research will hardly grind to a halt if the Tree of Life and LUCA go bust.

Watch the talk, along with the Q&A, and you’ll see what I mean.

Paul Nelson

Senior Fellow, Center for Science and Culture
Paul A. Nelson is currently a Senior Fellow of Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture and Adjunct Professor in the Master of Arts Program in Science & Religion at Biola University. He is a philosopher of biology who has been involved in the intelligent design debate internationally for three decades. His grandfather, Byron C. Nelson (1893-1972), a theologian and author, was an influential mid-20th century dissenter from Darwinian evolution. After Paul received his BA in philosophy with a minor in evolutionary biology from the University of Pittsburgh, he entered the University of Chicago, where he received his PhD (1998) in the philosophy of biology and evolutionary theory.
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