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Is The Human Embryo Essentially A Fish With Gills?

Almost from the beginning, evolutionists have attempted to equate the process of evolution with the progressive development of the embryo. Durign the famous Scopes “Monkey Trial” in 1925, for example, lawyers and expert witnesses defending teaching Darwinism in public schools, repeatedly confused evolution with embryology. The lawyers even insisted that evolution must be taught if physicians are to understand the development of babies in the womb! The very word “evolution” (which means “unfolding”) was taken from the name of an early theory of embryonic development of the baby. Obviously the blind-chance process of Darwinian “evolution” has nothing whatever to do with the exquisitely-controlled process of embyological development. Still, evolutionists have long attempted to relate embryology to evolution, presumably in an effort to extrapolate the readily-observable process of embyronic development into the unobservable process of macroevolution. Embryology continues to play a role in current evolutionary dogma. Generations of students have been told, for example, that the human embryo developing in the womb passes through stages of its evolutionary ancestry — even at one point having gills like a fish!

Like most students of biology, I was required to memorize the “biogenetic law” which states that “ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny.” This means that the developing embryo (ontogeny) of each vertebrate species retraces (recapitulates) its evolutionary history (phylogeny). Specifically, each embryo in the course of its development is said to pass through a progression of abbreviated stages that resemble the main evolutionary stages of its presumed ancestors. Thus, in the case of the human embryo, the recapitulation scenario goes something like this: 1) The fertilized egg starts as a single cell (just like our first living evolutionary “ancestor”). 2) As the fertilized egg repeatedly divides it develops into an embryo with a segmented arrangement (the “worm” stage). 3) These segments develop into vertebrae, muscles, and something that sort of looks like gills (the “fish” stage); 4) Limb buds develop with paddle-like hands and feet, and there appears to be a “tail” (the “amphibian” stage). 5) By about the eighth week of development, most organs are nearly complete, the limbs develop fingers and toes, and the “tail” disappears (the human stage). Now the mother can finally claim the baby as her own, or at least one of her own species. This ludicrous scenario has actually been used as a justification for abortion — after all, you are only killing lower animals!

The “biogenetic law” was first promulgated in the late 1800s by the German biologist Ernt Haeckel, a committed disciple of Darwin. Impressed by the general similarity among vertebrate embryos, Haeckel chose to ignore their differences. (Haeckel was a scientific charlatan who even stooped to publishing two copies of the same woodcut side by side to demonstrate the “remarkable similarity” between human and dog embryos!) Haeckel’s “law” was shown to be unsound by many of the most distinguished embryologists of his own day, but its appeal to evolutionists was so great that it remained impervious to scientific criticism. In her book Essays in the History of Embryology and Biology (MIT Press, 1967, pl. 150) Jane Oppenheimer said that the work of Haeckel “was the culmination of the extremes of exaggeration which followed Darwin.” She lamented that “Haeckels’ doctrines were blindly and uncritically accepted,” and “delayed the course of embryological progress.” Embryologist Erich Blechschmidt, considered Haeckels’ biogenetic “law” to be one of the most serious errors in the history of biology. In his book The Beginnings of Human Life (Springer-Verlag Inc., 1977, p. 32) Blechschmidt minced no words in repudiating Haeckel’s “law”: “The so-called basic law of biogenetics is wrong. No buts or ifs can mitigate this fact. It is not even a tiny bit correct or correct in a different form. It is totally wrong.” We could ignore this whole sorry chapter in the history of evolutionism, were it not for the fact that the biogenetic “law” is still being taught as a fact in our public schools! Of 15 high school biology textbooks being considered for adoption by the Indiana State Board of Education in 1980, nine offered embyological recapitulation as evidence for evolution.

Evolutionists themselves have conceded that the biogenetic “law” has become so deeply rooted in evolutionary dogma that it cannot be weeded out. For example, Paul Ehrlich said “its shortcomings have been almost universally pointed out by modern authors, but the idea still has prominent place in biological mythology” (The Process of Evolution, 1963, p. 66). Even Dr. Benjamin Spock saw fit to perpetuate Haeckel’s recapitulation myth in his well-known book, Baby and Child Care (Cardinal Giant Edition, 1957, p. 223). Spock confidently assured expectant mothers that “each child as he develops is retracing the whole history of mankind, physically and spiritually {sic}, step by step. A baby starts off in the womb as a single tiny cell, just the way the first living thing appeared in the ocean. Weeks later, as he lies in the amniotic fluid of the womb, he has gills like a fish.”

It is a well-established fact that the human embryo (like all mammalian embryos) never has gills in any sense of the word. The fanciful notion of gills is based upon the presence of four alternating ridges and grooves in the neck region of the human embryo (called pharyngeal arches and pouches) that bear a superficial resemblance to gills. While similar arches do give rise to gills in certain aquatic vertebrates such as fish, their developmental fate in mammals has nothing to do with gills or even breathing. In man and other mammals, these arches and pouches develop into part of the face, muscles of mastication and facial expression, bones of the middle ear, and endocrine glands.

The embryological development of the heart has been another popular textbook example of embryonic recapitulation, and thus “proof” of evolution. Evolutionists argue that as the human heart develops, it goes from a two-chambered “fish heart,” to a three-chambered “amphibian heart” and, finally, forms the four-chambered mammalian heart. In his book Comparative Anatomy and Embryology (Ronald Press, 1964, p. 509), William Ballard said “no false biological statement has had a longer or more popular life than the one about the ontogeny of the four-chambered heart.” Ballard pointed out that “in real life, all vertebrate hearts are composed of the same four chambers at the pharyngula stage.” As the heart develops these four chambers become specialized in different ways which are uniquely suited to the demands of aquatic, amphibious, or terrestrial life.

Embryologists are now aware that the embryos of each species of animal are unique and dynamically functional systems. The human embryo does not become human at some point during its development. Rather, it is uniquely human at every stage of its development. While scientists continue to learn much about the marvelous process of development in the embryo, the inspired words of King Solomon (Ecclesiastes 11:5) remain true: “As you do not know the path of the wind, or how the body is formed in a mother’s womb, so you cannot understand the work of God, the Maker of all things.”

–Dr. David N. Menton