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Subject:
From:
Jay Heuman <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 29 Jun 2005 13:03:33 -0600
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Greetings all!

[Stefanie: I hope you don't delete this before reading it.]

This has been a fecund discussion of whether resources and opinions about
evolution belong on Museum-L.  My feelings are that anything belongs on this
list provided it is information: (1) already known to or under investigation
by people; and, (2) that has been, is or soon will be fodder for museum
exhibitions, programs and/or publications.  Broad, huh?

Regardless, I'll declare myself more interested in one specific aspect of
evolution -- the physiology of the human eye and its relation to perception
and sensation.  After all, it's indisputable that every aspect of visual
processing is relevant to museums.  So, I include a link to a fascinating
article entitled "How did the human eye evolve" from TheScian Science Wiki:

     www.thescian.com/wiki/index.php/How_did_the_human_eye_evolve

Please note, especially, the following:

    "Many animals, including humans, have developed ways to
     detect photons and use it to their survival advantage.
     The most visible of these light detecting biological
     contraptions is the biological eye. The giant of a man,
     Darwin was too cautious about the evolution of eyes and
     made remark a about how complex the eye is and how hard
     it is for the eye to evolve by blind forces of nature.
     Although he later clarifies, people (read Creationists,
     Intelligent Design theorists) looking for evidence of
     divine intervention selectively read the remark and
     leave without picking up the later part which all the
     more important.
    "The eye, particularly the human eye, has provided an
     enduring platform for creationists to stage their magical
     theories. To set the records straight, let me state that
     the human eye is not a particularly well-evolved design.
     Octopus, for instance has a better evolved eye than the
     human eye."

[For even more scientific detail, see: www.catalase.com/retina.htm]

Of course, TheScian Science Wiki article points to the Creationist/ID
argument concerning the evolution of mammalian (particularly human) eyes.
Here ya' go . . .

    ³The eye, as one of the most complex organs, has been
     the symbol and archetype of his [Darwin¹s] dilemma.
     Since the eye is obviously of no use at all except in
     its final, complete form, how could natural selection
     have functioned in those initial stages of its evolution
     when the variations had no possible survival value? No
     single variation, indeed no single part, being of any
     use without every other, and natural selection presuming
     no knowledge of the ultimate end or purpose of the organ,
     the criterion of utility, or survival, would seem to be
     irrelevant. And there are other equally provoking
     examples of organs and processes which seem to defy
     natural selection. Biochemistry provides the case of
     chemical synthesis built up in several stages, of which
     the intermediate substance formed at any one stage is
     of no value at all, and only the end product, the final
     elaborate and delicate machinery, is useful‹and not only
     useful but vital to life. How can selection, knowing
     nothing of the end or final purpose of this process,
     function when the only test is precisely that end or
     final purpose?² Gertrude Himmelfarb, Darwin and the
     Darwinian Revolution (Garden City, New York: Doubleday,
     1959), pp. 320­321.]
     [Snagged from: www.creationscience.com]

Of course, this discussion could branch into famed neurologist Oliver Sacks'
books (i.e., The Island of the Colorblind, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for
a Hat), dealing with aberrations of human perception.  And so many other
researchers, thinkers, writers through history -- some physiological, some
psychological, some theoretical on the evolution of the eye, perception,
comprehension, pedagogical methods, etc.:

     Optics
     Cognitive psychology
     Semiotic theory
     Reception theory
     Visual culture
     etc.

So, is all this, too, irrelevant to Museum-L?  Hardly.

In an age when museums have hosted exhibitions of Barbie, Star Wars, and
plasticized human corpses, its outlandish to conceive of anything beyond the
scope of our professional eyes . . .

[BTW, John, whilst I haven't found evidence of a museum about chickens,
generally, there is a Col. Sander's Café & Museum . . .
www.corbinkentucky.us/sanderscafe.htm.  Greasy fun and fingers for one and
all, I'm certain.]

Best wishes, sincerely,

Jay Heuman
Curator of Education
Salt Lake Art Center
20 South West Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

T 801-328-4201
F 801-322-4323
E [log in to unmask]
W http://www.slartcenter.org

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