The following quotations of evolution theorists may serve to illustrate some statements of this passage.
Günther Osche, zoologist, concedes that the common source of information for similarities does not necessarily have to be searched for in a common ancestor: “As storage of information
[Ed.: He means the cause for similarity.] a “creator” can be assumed, after whose “plan” the compared structures are drawn up.”
(G. Osche: Das Homologisieren als eine grundlegende Methode der Phylogenetik. Aufsätze und Reden der Senckenbergischen naturforschenden Gesellschaft 24 (1973), S. 155-165.)
Dieter Stefan Peters, ornithologist, expresses it like this: The phenomenon of the graduated, hierarchically arranged similarity of living beings “is exceptionally compatible with the idea of evolution. But it is at least as compatible with the idea of a scala rerum or a static typologically arranged world. That is without additional assumption the mere similarity of organisms does not force one to believe in evolution.”
(D. S. Peters: Evolutionstheorie – Zwangsläufigkeit und Grenzen. In: P. Kaiser & D.S. Peters (Hg.) Evolutionstheorie und Schöpfungsverständnis. Regensburg 1984, S. 193-218.)
Wolf-Rüdiger Arendholz, botanist: “The differently distinguished species might as well be thought genetically independent next to each other and were indeed thought so beyond the evolutionism.”
(W.-R. Arendholz: Die Evolution ein Faktum? Zum Selbstverständnis der Synthetischen Theorie. Ethik und Sozialwissenschaften 5 (1994), S. 209-211) |