Piltdown Hoax

The Skeptic's Dictionary

Robert Todd Carroll 1996

Piltdown was an archaeological site in England where in 1908 and 1912 fossil remains of human, ape and other mammals were found. In 1913 at a nearby site was found an ape's jaw with a canine tooth worn down like a human's. To make a long story short, papers were published and the general community of paleoanthropologists came to accept the idea that the fossil remains belonged to a single creature who had a human cranium and an ape's jaw. In 1953, Piltdown `man' was exposed as a forgery: the skull was modern and the teeth on the ape's jaw had been filed down. To

those who are skeptical of science to the point of being anti-science such as Charles Fort and the Unfortunately, such episodes in science as Piltdown are taken to be proof that science is, more or less, bunk. To those who have a better understanding of the nature and limits of science, Piltdown is little more than a wrong turn down a series of roads which, despite such detours, eventually arrives at the right destination.

How had so many scientists been duped? Stephen Jay Gould offers several reasons, among them wishful thinking and cultural bias, which no doubt played a role in the lack of critical thinking among British paleoanthropologists. But, above all, the Piltdown forgery demonstrates the fallibility and human quality of scientific knowledge. It demonstrates, too, the way theories and facts are related in science. Theories precede facts; they are the filters through which facts are interpreted. And yet, facts precede theories; they are the events which theories try to explain and make sense of. Gould notes that today a human cranium with an ape's jaw is considered to be extremely implausible and far-fetched. But in the early part of this century, anthropologists were imbued with the cultural prejudice which considered man's big brain as his ticket to rule and as having made it possible for man to develop all his other unique features. There was a pre-conceived notion that man's brain must have developed to its human size before other changes occurred in human structure. So, a human cranium with an ape's jaw didn't rouse as much suspicion as it would today, when the fossil evidence clearly shows a progression from small-brained but upright (hence, non-simian) hominids, to larger-brained upright humans. Scientists "modeled the facts" instead of modeling their theory to fit the facts, "another illustration," says Gould, "that information always reaches us through the strong filters of culture, hope, and expectation." [Stephen Jay Gould, "Piltdown Revisited," in The Panda's Thumb, (New York: W.W Norton and Company), p. 118.] Once committed to a theory, people see what fits with the theory.

The main reason Piltdown was not spotted as a fraud much earlier was that scientists weren't allowed to see the "evidence," which was kept securely locked in the British Museum. Instead of focusing their attention on examining the "facts" more closely with an eye to discovering the fraud, scientists weren't even allowed to examine the physical evidence at all! They had to deal with plaster molds and be satisfied with a quick look at the originals to justify the claim that the models were accurate.

The moral of Piltdown is that science is fallible, a human activity which does not always take the most direct route in fulfilling its aim of understanding nature. When an anomaly such as the discovery of a human cranium with an ape's jaw occurs one must either fit it into a new theory, re-examine the evidence for error in discovery or interpretation, or show that the so-called anomaly is not really an anomaly at all but in fact fits with current theory. Which route a scientist takes may be guided more by personal hopes and cultural prejudices than by some mythical objectivity characterized by the collection and accumulation of colorless, impersonal facts to be pigeonholed dogmatically into a General Theory of Objective Truth and Knowledge.

But to characterize scientists as a bunch of arrogant buffoons making claims that often turn out to be false, and to make a caricature out of science because it is not infallible and does not arrive at absolutely certain claims, is a grave injustice. The buffoons are those who demand absolute certainty where none can be had; the buffoons are those who do not understand the value and beauty of probabilities in science. The arrogant ones are those who think that science is mere speculation because scientists make errors, even egregious errors, or at times even commit fraud to

push their prejudices. The arrogant ones are those who think one speculation is as good as another

and who can't tell the difference between a testable and an untestable hypothesis. The buffoons are

those who think that since scientists pose theories and creationists or other pseudoscientists pose theories, that each is doing essentially the same thing. However, all theories are not equally speculative, nor are they even all of the same type.

Because of the public nature of science and the universal application of its methods, and because of

the fact that the majority of scientists are not crusaders for their own untested or untestable prejudices as many pseudoscientists are, whatever errors are made by scientists are likely to be discovered by other scientists. The discovery will be enough to get science back on track. The same can't be said for the history of quacks and pseudoscientists where errors either never get detected because claims are not tested or where errors are identified by critics but ignored by true believers.

Finally, another reason some scientists were duped was probably because it was not in their nature

to consider someone would be so malicious as to intentionally engage in such deception. In any case, one of the main fallouts of Piltdown has been a virtual industry of detectives trying to figure out whodunit. The list of suspects includes: Charles Dawson, an amateur archaelogist who brought in the first cranial fragments from Piltdown; Tielhard de Chardin, theologian and scientist who accompanied Dawson and Arthur Smith Woodward (Keeper of Geology at the British Museum [Natural History] in 1912) to Piltdown on expeditions where they discovered the mandible; W.J. Solass, a professor of geology at Oxford; Grafton Elliot Smith, who wrote a paper on the find in 1913; Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes; and now (May 1996) Martin A.C. Hinton, a curator of zoology at the time of the Piltdown hoax. A trunk with Hinton's initials on it was recently found in an attic of London's Natural History Museum. The trunk contained bones stained and carved in the same way as the Piltdown fossils. The evidence in each case is circumstantial and not very strong. The only thing I feel certain about is that if any of the accused had to stand before the jury that acquitted O.J. Simpson, he would be a free man and the detectives would be laughed out of court. Of course, that's not saying much. It merely indicates that I doubt this case is closed just yet.

(note: Yet another book on the Piltdown hoax has been published since the Hinton trunk discovery. Unraveling Piltdown: The Science Fraud of the Century and Its Solution by John Evangelist Walsh (Random House, 1996) points the finger at Dawson once again.)

See related entries on Blondlot, the Forteans, and pseudoscience.

"Reply to Carroll"

Reader comments:

I thought you might be interested to know who created Piltdown man. In my

article on the subject in the spring issue of Pacific Discovery the magazine

published by the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco I present new

evidence that the man behind it was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Sounds to good to be

true? Perhaps, but he did do it. And knowing that it was him, Piltdown man can be

seen as a hoax--a huge practical joke--and not a case of scientific fraud committed

by a scientist to advance his career.

In the article, I solve a puzzle left by Doyle in his novel The Lost World (published

in 1912 right before Piltdown man's jaw turned up). The solution leaves little

doubt that Doyle was behind it, a suggestion that was made in Science 83 by an

anthropologist named John Winslow. Although he compiled a lot of circumstantial

evidence against Doyle, he failed to notice the puzzle.

To appreciate the solution to the Piltdown mystery you have to be open to the

possiblity that the hoaxer could have hidden the clues in a young person's

adventure novel, if you're not you won't get it. Also, I might mention that Doyle

began The Lost World with these four lines that haven't made much sense until

now:

I have wrought my simple plan

If I give one hour of joy

To the boy who's half a man

Or the man who's half a boy

Robert Anderson

American Museum of Natural History, NYC

response: I would have thought Arthur Conan Doyle would be more likely to fall for such a hoax than to perpetrate it, given his credulity with respect to the fairy tales of little girls.

 

07 Jun 1996

The little poem that this reader offers up as proof [that Arthur Conan Doyle perpetuated the Piltdown Man hoax is fine evidence that the human mind will see what it wants to see in almost anything.

In my opinion, that little poem is saying nothing more than this:

I have done my job as an author

If I can give but an hour's joy

To those children that dream of being adult

And to those adults with a child's heart

Or something to that effect. I'm sure you get the idea. Great Dictionary by the way! Keep up the

good work!

Michael D.S. Heacock

 

further reading

Bonny Sklar's Piltdown Man Page An anthropological perspective.

Richard Harter's Piltdown Man Page Focuses mainly on who might have perpetrated the hoax.

A Mostly Complete Piltdown Man Bibliography by Tom Turrittin

Anderson, Robert B. "The Case of the Missing Link," Pacific Discovery (Spring 1996).

Gee, Henry. "Box of Bones 'Clinches' Identity of Piltdown Paleontology Hoaxer," Nature (May

23, 1996).

Gould, Stephen Jay. "Piltdown Revisited," in The Panda's Thumb, (New York: W.W Norton and

Company, 1982).

Johanson, Donald C. and Maitland A. Edey.Lucy, the beginnings of humankind (New York :

Simon and Schuster, 1981).