The human body isn’t a masterpiece of design – it’s a patchwork of evolutionary compromise
Back in December 2024, I published The Body of Evidence: How the Human Body Refutes Intelligent Design as part of my Unintelligent Design series. In it, I argued that:
Looked at objectively, beneath the superficial appearance of design, the human body, with its inefficiencies, vulnerabilities and vestigial features, is best explained through the lens of evolution.
Far from reflecting intelligent design, our anatomy and physiology reveal a history of incremental changes shaped by natural selection and constrained by pre-existing structures. These imperfections underscore the reality of evolution as a tinkering process, producing functional but far-from-perfect outcomes.
In this light, the human body stands as a powerful testament to our evolutionary heritage and tells a story far more impressive than the childish notion of it all being made by magic by a super-intelligent yet invisible and undetectable designer.
It is therefore gratifying to see those conclusions independently reinforced by Lucy E. Hyde, a Lecturer in Anatomy at the University of Bristol. In a recent article in The Conversation, she makes essentially the same case, drawing upon many of the same examples that I used.
This is not because anatomists and evolutionary biologists have agreed upon a preferred story and then set out to make the evidence fit it. It is because people who understand evolution and possess more than a superficial knowledge of human anatomy and physiology can examine the same evidence and independently reach the same broad conclusion: the human body is not the product of foresightful engineering but a historical patchwork of inherited structures, evolutionary compromises and modifications to what already existed.
Evolution explains not only why the human body works as well as it does, but also why it so often fails, why some of its structures follow absurdly circuitous routes, why others are poorly suited to their present functions and why still others persist despite having little or no remaining usefulness. “Intelligent design”, by contrast, explains none of this without retreating into the scientifically worthless claim that an unknowable designer must have wanted things that way.
Lucy Hyde’s article is reproduced below under a Creative Commons licence, with its formatting adapted for consistency with this blog:





































