Glad to see salty posting as much "evidence" at ARN as he did here
I hope you noticed that after identifying Schindewolf as the greatest paleontologist of his day, Gould found it necessary to dispense with Schindewolf by saying that his views were "spectacularly flawed". The difficulties with evolution have nothing to do with real science, but rather with the eternal struggle for the control of man's position in the world. Darwinism is the religion of evolutionary atheism. Man is but an afterthought. In Gould's own words - "Intelligence was an evolutinary accident".
I agree entirely with Robert Broom that there has been a plan. I also feel that Leo S. Berg was right on with his view that there is no place for chance in either ontogeny or phylogeny. Just as music has its three Bs, Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, so evolution has its three Bs, Broom, Berg and Bateson. Of course there have been many more skeptics of the Darwinian fable and I am delighted to be one of them!