The Blind Watchmaker-Richard Dawkins
***1/2/***** Science
The
Blind Watchmaker
Richard
Dawkins
Life in its
various forms represents the most sophisticated and the most elegant creation
in universe. Intricacy of anatomy and physiology of each and every part of the
body of an organism is mind boggling. Most organic creatures have evolved
incredibly intricate and complicated bodies adapting them to their
environment. When faced with such marvellous design, it is tempting
to believe in an all-powerful designer who created these awesome beings.
William Paley,
an eighteenth-century Christian apologist and a natural theologist, famously
conjured a watchmaker's analogy to posit existence of a creator. He argued that
if one stumbles across a watch while walking on a moor and examines its
intricate mechanism, he will naturally wonder who designed this complicated
object and would not ascribe it to chance. Thus, human body that is much more
complex has had to be designed by a creator. This is the basic tenet which
Richard Dawkins wants to refute in this book. He asserts that he too is
spellbound by the design of living organisms. He devotes one full chapter
describing the complicated mechanism of echo location which bats have evolved
to illustrate the intricacy of living organisms. But he states this was not
designed by a creator but by the blind forces of nature i.e. the blind process
of natural selection. Natural selection cannot foresee future as life gradually
-painfully gradually like growing of nails- evolves on this planet. Hence the
title of the book, The Blind Watchmaker.
Man has
descended from apes; this is the only statement most of us know about Darwin’s
theory of natural selection. This is not only a deceptive simplification but
also untrue if accepted at its face value. Richard Dawkins presents the theory
here in all its glory and grandeur. He devises simple metaphors to illustrate
the profound and intricate points about evolution. This is ironically one of
the drawbacks of the book; in an attempt to make the concepts easy for
layperson Dawkins had to sacrifice brevity at many places and the resulting
lengthy discussions on a single point are occasionally tedious.
Dawkins has done
a great service to all who have often wondered about the origin of life and
whose faith in atheism has often wavered when confronted with the awesome
design of the universe and its inhabitants. Book is written in a simple
language but the concepts presented require sincere reading and application of
average intellect. Once the understanding dawns, the ensuing pleasure of
discovery is most delightful. Dawkins, while being a staunch believer in
Darwinism is also an astute and skilful writer. He defends Darwinism tooth and
nail with arguments that are persuasive and stated in a lucid prose. Anyone
with even a modicum of interest in origin of life, should not miss this book.
It informs us of such eye-opening facts about life and existence that one
feels, it would have been a shame if one had died without knowing them.
Nov 2011
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