Larry Moran is a Canadian biochemist and textbook author who has a blog about evolutionary biology called The Sandwalk. Recently he has been posting essay questions which he intends to use in an upcoming test of his students. Quotes from Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett that he wants his students to critique. Also some quotes from Richard Lewontin that he wants his readers to admire.
The interesting thing is that Dennett and Dawkins have both jumped into the discussion, as have a number of my favorite (though lesser known) biology bloggers. Interesting discussion. Worth a look if you are interested in evolutionary biology.
It's always awesome to see Richard Dawkins in action, but where's the substance? So rhino horn count might or might not be adaptive. Blood groups might or might not be adaptive. The 'tongue-rolling' gene might or might not have adaptive pleiotropic effects. These questions aren't 'boring' exactly but they're minutiae.
Reading Darwin's Dangerous Idea gave me the impression that the fundamental divide between the "adaptationists" and their opponents is whether all non-trivial instances of "design" in nature are the result of natural selection (including sexual selection) for something (which may or may not be the same thing that the design is currently used for) or whether somehow 'constraints' and genetic drift can funnel the progress of evolution towards complex ("designed-looking") characteristics that confer no adaptive advantage.
(To me, the latter still seems weird and unmotivated, though I'm not ideologically wedded to it being wrong.)
I suppose the epistemological point that Lewontin would harp on here is that if you go in expecting Nature to only do things that seem well-motivated and 'natural', then you are going to produce ideologically biased science.
But as to whether evolution can produce comp... (read more)