The Case Against Common Ancestry: Scientific and Philosophical Challenges
The theory of universal common ancestry posits that all living organisms on Earth share a single, original biological source. While this concept serves as a central pillar of modern evolutionary biology, it faces a variety of counterarguments from both specialized scientific disciplines and philosophical frameworks. Critics within paleontology, molecular biology, and information theory argue that the data can be interpreted to support alternative models, such as polyphyletic origins—the idea that life began from multiple independent, distinct lineages. The Fossil Record and the Cambrian Explosion One of the oldest and most enduring arguments against a single common ancestor stems from the fossil record itself, specifically the phenomenon known as the Cambrian Explosion. Occurring roughly 540 million years ago, this geological event represents a sudden, dramatic appearance of major animal body plans, or phyla, without clear, gradual transitional forms in the preceding Precambrian strata...