EndlessKnot
Sep 21, 2009
Student Talk / Annie Dillard; What are peoples' opinions on her? [10]
Dillard takes evolution as a given, a fact of life, as shown by her references to it throughout that essay. She says point-blank of the animals on Galapagos, "Most exist nowhere else on earth. These reptiles and insects, small mammals and birds, evolved unmolested on the various islands on which they were cast into unique species." Of the shearwater fly, she says "it has evolved two nice behaviors which serve to bring into its nest alive." When she flicks off the flies that bite her, she refers to this action as giving their "evolutionary ball an offsides shove."
The paragraph you cited isn't describing her own thoughts, but the inability of Western and Russian scientists to reconcile their thoughts on evolution. That is why she says, "So much for scientists." The "many" for whom neo-Darwinism "lacks [...] sheer plausibility" are the descendants of Lamarck's ideas. They want to "append [...] a very modified neo-Lamarckism to Darwinism [to] solve many problems--and create new ones." She doesn't show herself to be on their side, as she mentions that this view holds ideas for which it lacks any proof.
She does say that "neo-Darwinism seriously lacks [...] a description of the actual mechanism of mutation in the chromosomal nucleotides." The scientists still have work to do, as they always will in every field. But that doesn't mean she doesn't accept that evolution is a basic principle of life.
Dillard takes evolution as a given, a fact of life, as shown by her references to it throughout that essay. She says point-blank of the animals on Galapagos, "Most exist nowhere else on earth. These reptiles and insects, small mammals and birds, evolved unmolested on the various islands on which they were cast into unique species." Of the shearwater fly, she says "it has evolved two nice behaviors which serve to bring into its nest alive." When she flicks off the flies that bite her, she refers to this action as giving their "evolutionary ball an offsides shove."
The paragraph you cited isn't describing her own thoughts, but the inability of Western and Russian scientists to reconcile their thoughts on evolution. That is why she says, "So much for scientists." The "many" for whom neo-Darwinism "lacks [...] sheer plausibility" are the descendants of Lamarck's ideas. They want to "append [...] a very modified neo-Lamarckism to Darwinism [to] solve many problems--and create new ones." She doesn't show herself to be on their side, as she mentions that this view holds ideas for which it lacks any proof.
She does say that "neo-Darwinism seriously lacks [...] a description of the actual mechanism of mutation in the chromosomal nucleotides." The scientists still have work to do, as they always will in every field. But that doesn't mean she doesn't accept that evolution is a basic principle of life.