Although the disadvantages of my status as outsider heavily outweigh
the advantages, occasionally a situation arises that gives me an opportunity to
do something that would probably cause serious difficulties if I were on the
faculty of a university or a member of an institutional research team. Perhaps
the song "Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose"
exaggerates, but there are situations where the risk involved in reacting
strongly to the incompetence of others is minimal and one is compelled to
respond with frankness and vigor.
My idea—that lethal juvenile cancer played an essential role in the
origin and evolution of complex animals—has
gained some notice in journals; my two
Journal
of Theoretical Biology Letters and my amplifying
book have been
cited. But those
citations appear in works devoted, not to Bilaterian evolution, which is the
subject of my work, but to cancer. In an attempt draw the attention of the
evolutionary community to my theory I recently submitted a manuscript to an
evolution journal. Unfortunately, after review the journal rejected it. I then emailed the editor, telling him I accepted the finality of his decision, but that I found
his reviewers' comments of poor quality. I went on to identify the principal
reviewer's failings. My email to him was rather lengthy but I will summarize its
major points in this and in subsequent postings.
Prior to sending my manuscript out
for review the editor disclosed that he had contacted a few scientists about
it, including “Doctor X,” who had previously offered me unsolicited (and
unwelcome) advice which was the subject of
this
posting. In my letter to the editor I quoted dismissive comments about me and my idea made
by “X” in an interview with a journalist and in an email to a third party. I
also told the editor that I believe his Reviewer #1 was actually “X” himself or
his “intellectual, psychological and ethical clone.” I reached that conclusion
because the reviewer’s comments reeked of the smugness “X” adopted in
communicating with me.
What is most important in
understanding what the reviewer did is that my manuscript contained nothing new;
I made no original proposals. It is a concise, fact-based argument for the
theory already published in the
Journal of Theoretical Biology
and in my
Nature-reviewed book. By telling the editor that mine is
a “dubious global theory” and taking the position that an argument in its favor
doesn’t deserve publication in an evolution journal, “X” is implying that the
following were wrong: the late James F. Danielli, FRS, founding editor of
JTB and his co-reviewing member of that
journal’s Editorial Board,
Nature’s
book
reviewer and the
Nature editor(s?) who decided, first,
that my book was worthy of review and then approved publication of the (generally
favorable) review. According to this single individual those biologists were all
wrong to publish my ideas and he urged the editor not to allow the readers of his
evolution journal to even learn of my theory’s existence.
To give some sense of the
principal reviewer’s inaccuracies here’s a quote from my letter to the editor:
"Like [X], the reviewer is weirdly obsessed
with “diversity.” In his relatively brief comments he mentions “diversity” or
“diverse” thirteen times, giving the erroneous impression that my theory is all
about (and only about) the number of extant species in Bilaterians versus the
other multicells.
"He ignores what I emphasize: fundamental
characteristics of Bilaterians…that distinguish them from cell colonies. To
cite just one example, there is the matter of phenotypic uniformity in
Bilaterians (to the point of eutely in nematodes and some insects). That widespread
uniformity reflects a level of control over the precise construction of the
entire soma, a degree of control not found in cell colonies. I think
fundamental and obvious differences among multicells require solid theoretical
explanation and in the historical science of evolution that means identifying
explanatory events that occurred in the past. Reviewer #1 obviously does not.
He is content with a theory that is silent on such important distinctions."
This reviewer has read my book
(as did “X”) so he knows that in addition to phenotypic uniformity I offer
evolutionarily-effective mechanistic explanations (attributed to cancer
selection’s postulated occurrence only in Bilaterians) for other fundamental
differences between the Bilaterians and the cell colonies including the
following:
UV radiation avoidance. The earliest
Bilaterians burrowed in the sea
bottom and their nearest descendants crawled on the bottom. The crawlers all possessed non-cellular external
coverings and their marine descendants lived (for more than 300 million years) in the sea which itself affords
environmental shielding from radiation. Of the terrestrial Bilaterians the only
ones to shed external protection against radiation were vertebrates equipped
with adaptive immune systems capable of killing cancer cells. Terrestrial
invertebrate Bilaterians, which do not possess adaptive immune systems, all
seem to have retained external non-cellular radiation shields. In contrast, some cell colonies, notably jellyfish were
not even provided external pigmentation which, like non-cellular shielding, would protect from
the effects of mutagenic/carcinogenic radiation.
Flamboyant
regeneration. With few exceptions (some annelids, echinoderms, salamanders)
Bilaterians do not display the spectacular feats of regeneration found in other
multicells.
Programmed
senescence. All Bilaterians display
genetically-controlled senescence which I claim (on pages 82 and 83 of my book)
is an anti-cancer mechanism. Not incidentally, an American biologist has reached an identical conclusion.
The reviewer
does not even mention any of these four fundamental differences, all of which I identified
in the peer-reviewed Letters and amplified in the Nature-reviewed book. He simply goes on and on (and on and on)
about “diversity,” giving the editor the erroneous impression that because
there are thousands of non-Bilaterian multicell species my theory is wrong.
Any student
who submitted a paper containing such an egregious error would receive a
failing grade. But this reviewer convinced the editor not to inform his
readers of my published theory.
© 2013 by James Graham