Jonathan Wells is dead


Wells was one of the worst liars at the Discovery Institute, which is saying a lot. His pals out there in Seattle are writing his praises, of course; you won’t be surprised that they don’t understand why Wells’ books were loathed. Here’s Casey Luskin, who inevitably gets everything wrong.

A lot of people hated Jonathan, not because he was a hateworthy person, but because of the bad news he delivered about their scientific arguments. His ideas threatened their paradigm, and he wasn’t afraid to say so. But he didn’t hate back. He was a kind and caring person who used his gifts to make an immense impact, helping to reform junk science that had bloated evolution education worldwide. For all these reasons, Dr. Jonathan Wells will not be forgotten anytime soon. By his many friends, readers, and others who have benefited from his research, and of course by his loving family, he will be greatly missed.

He did not deliver bad news about scientific arguments; he didn’t understand, or pretended not to understand, the science he was criticizing. Everything he wrote was a misrepresentation. He didn’t reform junk science, he vomited up books that were nothing but junk science. I am confident that he wasn’t just ignorant, but that he intentionally, willfully, and maliciously lied about the science.

He was an intelligent man who got a Ph.D. in religious studies from Yale, and then got a second Ph.D. in cellular and developmental biology from the University of California Berkeley. There’s rarely ever a good reason to get a second Ph.D., and Wells had the worst reason ever: he had become a Moonie, and he got the second degree at the behest of his church so that he would be better equipped to destroy Darwinism.

Father’s [Rev. Moon’s] words, my studies, and my prayers convinced me that I should devote my life to destroying Darwinism, just as many of my fellow Unificationists had already devoted their lives to destroying Marxism. When Father chose me (along with about a dozen other seminary graduates) to enter a Ph.D. program in 1978, I welcomed the opportunity to prepare myself for battle.

Yeah, he was one of those misguided people who went through a research program not to learn anything, but to get a few letters after his name so he could pretend to be an authority. He also dishonored Berkeley with a badge of shame; it is appalling that someone so dishonest and so committed to distorting the science could fool the research scientists at that prestigious university.

He distorted every idea he touched. Larry Moran thoroughly debunked his treatment of junk DNA, for my part, I wrote about how he constantly botched and misinformed people about developmental biology. Here’s an example of one of my posts in which I wasted my time dissecting the glurge of garbage pouring out of his Moonie brain.

The next person–apparently a professor of developmental biology–objected that the film ignored facts showing the unity of life, especially the universality of the genetic code, the remarkable similarity of about 500 housekeeping genes in all living things, the role of HOX genes in building animal body plans, and the similarity of HOX genes in all animal phyla, including sponges. 1Steve began by pointing out that the genetic code is not universal, but the questioner loudly complained that 2he was not answering her questions. I stepped up and pointed out that housekeeping genes are similar in all living things because without them life is not possible. I acknowledged that HOX gene mutations can be quite dramatic (causing a fly to sprout legs from its head in place of antennae, for example), but 3HOX genes become active midway through development, 4long after the body plan is already established. 5They are also remarkably non-specific; for example, if a fly lacks a particular HOX gene and a comparable mouse HOX gene is inserted in its place, the fly develops normal fly parts, not mouse parts. Furthermore, 6the similarity of HOX genes in so many animal phyla is actually a problem for neo-Darwinism: 7If evolutionary changes in body plans are due to changes in genes, and flies have HOX genes similar to those in a horse, why is a fly not a horse? Finally, 8the presence of HOX genes in sponges (which, everyone agrees, appeared in the pre-Cambrian) still leaves unanswered the question of how such complex specified genes evolved in the first place.

The questioner became agitated and shouted out something to the effect that HOX gene duplication explained the increase in information needed for the diversification of animal body plans. 9I replied that duplicating a gene doesn’t increase information content any more than photocopying a paper increases its information content. She obviously wanted to continue the argument, but the moderator took the microphone to someone else.

It blows my mind, man, it blows my freakin’ mind. How can this guy really be this stupid? He has a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley in developmental biology, and he either really doesn’t understand basic ideas in the field, or he’s maliciously misrepresenting them…he’s lying to the audience. He’s describing how he so adroitly fielded questions from the audience, including this one from a professor of developmental biology, who was no doubt agitated by the fact that Wells was feeding the audience steaming balls of rancid horseshit. I can’t blame her. That was an awesomely dishonest/ignorant performance, and Wells is proud of himself. People should be angry at that fraud.

I’ve just pulled out this small, two-paragraph fragment from his longer post, because it’s about all I can bear. I’ve flagged a few things that I’ll explain — the Meyer/Wells tag team really is a pair of smug incompetents.

1The genetic code is universal, and is one of the pieces of evidence for common descent. There are a few variants in the natural world, but they are the exceptions that prove the rule: they are slightly modified versions of the original code that are derived by evolutionary processes. For instance, we can find examples of stop codons in mitochondria that have acquired an amino acid translation. You can read more about natural variation in the genetic code here.

2That’s right, he wasn’t answering her questions. Meyer was apparently bidding for time until the big fat liar next to him could get up a good head of steam.

3This implication that Hox gene expression is irrelevant because it is “late” was a staple of Wells’ book, Icons of Evolution and the Politically Incorrect Guide to Darwinism and Intelligent Design. It’s a sham. The phylotypic stage, when the Hox genes are exhibiting their standard patterns of expression, of humans is at 4-5 weeks (out of 40 weeks), and in zebrafish it’s at 18-24 hours. These are relatively early events. The major landmarks before this period are gastrulation, when major tissue layers are established, and neurulation, when the neural tube forms. Embryos are like elongate slugs with the beginnings of a few tissues before this time.

4What? Patterned Hox gene expression is associated with the establishment of the body plan. Prior to this time, all the embryonic chordate has of a body plan is a couple of specified axes, a notochord, and a dorsal nerve tube. The pharyngula stage/phylotypic stage is the time when Hox gene expression is ordered and active, when organogenesis is ongoing, and when the hallmarks of chordate embryology, like segmental myotomes, a tailbud, and branchial arches are forming.

5Hox genes are not non-specific. They have very specific patterning roles; you can’t substitute abdominal-B for labial, for instance. They can be artificially swapped between individuals of different phyla and still function, which ought, to a rational person, be regarded as evidence of common origin, but they definitely do instigate the assembly of different structures in different species, which is not at all surprising. When you put a mouse gene in a fly, you are transplanting one gene out of the many hundreds of developmental genes needed to build an eye; the eye that is assembled is built of 99% fly genes and 1% (and a very early, general 1%) mouse genes. If it did build a mouse eye in a fly, we’d have to throw out a lot of our understanding of molecular genetics and become Intelligent Design creationists.

Hox genes are initiators or selectors; they are not the embryonic structure itself. Think of it this way: the Hox genes just mark a region of the embryo and tell other genes to get to work. It’s as if you are contracting out the building of a house, and you stand before your subcontractors and tell them to build a wall at some particular place. If you’ve got a team of carpenters, they’ll build one kind of wall; masons will build a different kind.

6No, the similarity of Hox genes is not a problem. It’s an indicator of common descent. It’s evidence for evolution.

7Good god.

Why is a fly not a horse? Because Hox genes are not the blueprint, they are not the totality of developmental events that lead to the development of an organism. You might as well complain that the people building a tarpaper shack down by the railroad tracks are using hammers and nails, while the people building a MacMansion on the lakefront are also using hammers and nails, so shouldn’t their buildings come out the same? Somebody who said that would be universally regarded as a clueless moron. Ditto for a supposed developmental biologist who thinks horses and flies should come out the same because they both have Hox genes.

8You can find homeobox-containing genes in plants. All that sequence is is a common motif that has the property of binding DNA at particular nucleotide sequences. What makes for a Hox gene, specifically, is its organization into a regulated cluster. How such genes and gene clusters could arise is simply trivial in principle, although working out the specific historical details of how it happened is more complex and interesting.

The case of sponges is enlightening, because they show us an early step in the formation of the Hox cluster. Current thinking is that sponges don’t actually have a Hox cluster (the first true Hox genes evolved in cnidarians), they have a Hox-like cluster of what are called NK genes. Apparently, grouping a set of transcription factors into a complex isn’t that uncommon in evolution.

9If you photocopy a paper, the paper doesn’t acquire more information. But if you’ve got two identical twins, A who is holding one copy of the paper, and B who is holding two copies of the same paper, B has somewhat more information. Wells’ analogy is a patent red herring.

The ancestral cnidarian proto-Hox cluster is thought to have contained four Hox genes. Humans have 39 Hox genes organized into four clusters. Which taxon contains more information in its Hox clusters? This is a trick question for Wells; people with normal intelligence, like most of you readers, would have no problem recognizing that 39 is a bigger number than 4. Jonathan Wells seems to have missed that day in his first grade arithmetic class.

It still infuriates me that a guy with a Ph.D. in developmental biology from Berkely would ask, if flies have HOX genes similar to those in a horse, why is a fly not a horse? Because the Hox genes only trigger the deployment of downstream genes of the animal, ya idjit.

Casey Luskin is wrong. I didn’t hate Wells personally — I never met him — but I did hate his lies, of which there were many, whole books worth of ’em. Good riddance to lying scum.

Comments

  1. says

    I tried to think of something nice I could say about Wells, and this is all I’ve got: I can accuse Wells of being a dishonest fraud in a post, and because I can always easily take apart his stupid arguments, the Discovery Institute is unable to point to it as evidence that I’m rude and uncivil.

  2. raven says

    For all these reasons, Dr. Jonathan Wells will not be forgotten anytime soon.

    The ID Institute always lies about everything.

    Here is another one of their lies.
    Jonathan Wells has already been forgotten, long before he died. He was a nobody.
    Creationism is a lie, a xian myth from centuries ago that was known to be wrong centuries ago.

    As fundie xianity dies out, so do its myths.
    Since the creationists lost their battle to wreck science education in the public schools, I haven’t thought of Jonathan Wells in many years.

    Whether he was alive or dead, he was irrelevant.

  3. raven says

    Jonathon Wells lying:

    I replied that duplicating a gene doesn’t increase information content any more than photocopying a paper increases its information content.

    Wells is wrong here. The fact that there are now two copies is another piece of information.

    More significantly, those two copies of a gene are now free to mutate and diverge. Which is exactly what happens often.
    At that time, they are no longer exact copies and the combined information content is in fact, much larger.

    We can see this happen in Real Time. It’s an observed, predictable fact.

  4. mathman85 says

    Wells: […] duplicating a gene doesn’t increase information content any more than photocopying a paper increases its information content.

    Remind me, if you would; did Wells et al. ever bother to define “information” in such a way as to be able to quantify the information content of anything? No? It’s “No”, isn’t it?

  5. says

    I guess it’s useful somewhere but I haven’t found the concept of information useful for thinking about things here. But I don’t do information as an academic area much.

    I see sets of relationships between molecules. Genes don’t represent things, they have relationships with things. I see cells as membrane bound relationships between genomes and ribosomes, via the processes of transcription and translation. The whole set of relationships matters when it comes to origins and people tend to hyperfocus on the DNA.

    There is no code.

  6. says

    The genetic code is a molecular kludge associated with metabolism itself.

    Warning, large image file. It’s an update to an old project. A functional draft with a few uncaught errors likely.
    It’s an alignment between nucleotide metabolism and mostly everything directly connected to nucleotide metabolism. And the protein subdomain families of everything relative to the bins on ECOD.
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LQJGc8rowm1Wg51f9CdH3SdKSvDOMXB_/view?usp=drivesdk

    Evolutionary Classification of Protein Domains
    http://prodata.swmed.edu/ecod/

  7. Owlmirror says

    snort
    The one good thing about Jonathan Wells is that he nerd-sniped biologists into giving rantsplanations about why he was so very very WRONG.

  8. birgerjohansson says

    One good thing about Wells: if creationists make a biopic about him it will promptly provide God Awful Movies with more material.

  9. chrislawson says

    mathman85@4–

    Even worse than refusing to work within well-established information theories, they created fake terms like ‘specified complexity’ and ‘irreducible complexity’ and refused to define them. In the worst case, the term ‘irreducible complexity’ was applied to the structure of flagella even though it was known for decades prior that there is a wide range of flagellar structures, including structures far less complex than the example case chosen.

  10. chrislawson says

    Re: Wells’ HOX gene argument:

    If flies and horses both have legs, why is a fly not a horse?

    Really, it’s just another ‘why are there still monkeys?’ argument — complete nonsense designed to be a thought-stopper for people who want their thoughts to be stopped.

  11. says

    Oh yeah, “information theory.” I always considered that fairly easy to debunk, simply by asking if an oak tree contains more “information” than the little acorn from which it sprouted; or if ice crystals contain more “information” than the water that froze to form them. That’s when the cdesign proponentsists start throwing in more vague qualifiers, like “complexity” and “specification.” That’s about as fake as fake science can get.

  12. mineralfellow says

    I met Casey Luskin a few years back at a conference in South Africa. I couldn’t believe it was him at first, but he really did do his doctoral work on paleomagnetism. He presented a poster, and it was all normal stuff for the field. Strangely, his study area was the Pongola Supergroup (as I recall), which is strange because those rocks are 2900 million years old. I told my colleagues at the time that I thought he was getting his doctorate so that he could go back and flount his credentials, and that seems to be exactly what he is doing.

  13. tacitus says

    @13: Jonathan McLatchie is another Disco Institute fellow who obtained a legit Evolutionary Biology PhD specifically in service to furthering his personal crusade against evolution.

    He seems to have resumed his anti-evolution diatribes about a year ago after focusing on Christian apologetics for several years. Seems like he can’t find much traction for either of his futile ventures — he’s not a good public speaker — though I don’t doubt he’ll find a right wing sugar daddy to help keep the grift going.

  14. StevoR says

    @ mineralfellow : Pongola Supergroup?

    (wikichecks)

    The Pongola glaciation is a glacial episode that occurred in the Mesoarchean, 2.9 Ga ago for about 150 Ma. It is the oldest known glaciation on the planet.

    Huh. Cool.

    Literally, well freezing cold more than merely cool but relative terms & all.

    Something new learnt today – thanks.

  15. chrislawson says

    Raging Bee@12–

    As John Morales says, information theory is very much an active, important field in STEM. Our computers and phones wouldn’t work without it. The DI co-opted a superficial smattering of the language of information theory to misuse it for creationist ends, much as alternative health shonks sometimes misuse terms from quantum theory.

  16. Ted Lawry says

    I attended the Memorial for Phillip Johnson (Nov 23 2019) at the Berkeley First Presbyterian Church. I spoke with J. Wells, picking him because he was standing alone. (I remember pretty clearly what we said, but I am
    a bit hazy about the precise order in which we said it.)

    I asked about the discussion of embryonic gills in his Icons of Evolution book. I pointed out that he only mentioned the external gill grooves, but not the pouches and embryonic gill bars. He tried to cut me off saying that I shouldn’t call them gill bars because they weren’t any actual gills. I said I didn’t care what they were called but the embryonic bars were there, along with the cranial nerves 5, 7, 9, and 10, also the arteries, just as would be needed for making gills. He tried to claim these parts were needed for making a “neck” -his word- but I pointed out that the pattern of arteries for gills is very different from a neck, where you just need simple tubes running from the heart to the head. At about this point he pleaded ignorance, claiming thathe didn’t know about all the other gill parts besides the grooves. This from a man with a PhD in biology from Berkeley!

    I should have responded more aggressively, pointing out that both he, and ID generally, accuse mainstream biology of Getting It All Wrong, in embryology particularly. And yet he says he didn’t know, and couldn’t be bothered to check, basic facts of embryology! Instead I pointed out that in the first gill slit, the groove and pouch don’t quite break through forming the eardrum, with the groove forming the ear canal and the pouch making the middle ear and Eustachian tube. (Too many facts, Ted!) I also mentioned the Embryonic Coloring Book used to teach medical students embryology. (My point being that information about basic embryology is readily accessible.) At about this point he said that “If I say I didn’t know it, then I didn’t know it.” If an ID advocate says he doesn’t know something, then you can believe him!

    I also tried to make the point that reprogramming gill parts to make new organs is just what evolution would do, since once fish came ashore they would need new organs, I mentioned a larynx, and the now useless gill parts were just sitting there. But he wouldn’t hear of it, asserting that he didn’t believe in fish coming ashore because he was sure that there was no way that one species could turn into another. I asked him if he would “entertain the hypothesis” so I could at least finish making my point, but no. (The DI speakers had praised PJ for being so open minded and willing to debate anything, but it seems Wells isn’t like that.)

    I countered by pointing out all these embryonic similarities,at which he said something very interesting and revealing. He believed that human embryology is the basis for all other (vertebrate) embryology! At first I thought he was alluding to scientific knowledge of embryology being biased towards human embryos, because human embryos are studied so much, but no, he really does think that the similarities between human and other embryos arise because they are based on us!

    ID has always suffered from its complete cluelessness about what the Designer actually did, which stops it from making testable predictions. But maybe Wells has that long sought theory. He has made cryptic remarks about how genes can’t be the whole story of embryonic development, but he never says why he thinks so, or what the real answer might be. Maybe he just let that slip!

    Wells also said that his confidence that no species could turn into another was based on what he saw when studying embryos. His PhD thesis title is “A confocal microscopy study of microtubule arrays involved in cortical rotation during the first cell cycle of Xenopus [frog] embryos.” So he must have seen a lot of embryos, even if he claims not to know the basics about embryonic gills. He didn’t say what he saw, however. I should have asked why he hadn’t published this great insight. Even if mainstream journals wouldn’t take it there are all these in-house ID journals which are always dying on the vine because no one has anything to publish in them.!

    At this point Wells said that “this conversation is not serving any useful purpose.” Well it could have, if he had been willing to talk turkey some more, but he clearly wasn’t, so that was the end of it. I left without talking to anyone else.

    Before talking to him, I had harbored a vague hope that Wells was better than that, that maybe there really were some embryological facts that supported ID, which Wells hadn’t bothered to mention because they were too techy. In other words, maybe Wells wasn’t just a wordsmith who tried to make evolution look bad by the dishonest tactic leaving out all the facts. I really doubted it on the grounds that if there were such facts, surely someone on the ID/creationism side would have mentioned them. Wells has clearly removed that last possibility of exoneration!

  17. notaandomposter says

    if there was a hell (and he had a soul) his would be there – so much ‘bearing false witness’

    bearing false witness isn’t lying – it’s false religious apologetics, or fleecing the devout with insincere religious ministry (all that the disco institute does )

    I am not a religious person, but I can tolerate folks having whatever motivation to do good deeds / form communities/ whatever floats their own boats etc. The propagation of falsehoods/propaganda by the disco institute and their ilk, that I have zero tolerance for. good riddance

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