The theory of evolution
The
roots of the theory of evolution goes back many years before Charles Darwin. In
the 17th century, scientists like Francis Bacon and William Harvey
recognized it.
In 1855, Alfred
Russel Wallace published the theory of evolution in a brief note in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History. On
March 9, 1858, he explained the theory in a letter to Charles Darwin.37
Twenty months later, in 1859, Darwin published a more detailed version of the
theory in his book that he had been at work on earlier: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the
Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It became an
instant sensation.
The
Theory of Evolution posits that all living things changed through the ages into
all the life forms today. From the first living cell, “simple” organisms
evolved into fish, then into amphibians, then into reptiles, then into birds
and mammals, then into primates and, eventually, man.
“Ontogeny
recapitulates phylogeny”?
Ernst Heinrich
Haeckel helped spread
Haeckel, however,
cheated. He altered illustrations to fit his theory when the similarity of
embryos was not satisfactory. He was found out, charged with fraud, and convicted
by a university court at
Surprisingly, many modern textbooks still
include the disproved idea as proof for evolution.
Mutation: engine of evolution?
Evolutionists
claim that mutation, a change in the genetic material (DNA) inside the cells of
plants and animals, is the engine of evolution. Mutational changes are said to
be passed on to descendants – producing “improved” new members of the species,
which gradually turn into a new distinct species.
Harmful, not helpful. For mutation to
happen, new information has to be introduced in the genes of the organism. Yet,
practically all mutations showed a loss, rather than a gain, of genetic
information – resulting in missing eyes, limbs, wings, tails, etc. Author Lee
Spetner (Not by Chance, 1996)
reports: “All point mutations that have
been studied on the molecular level turn out to reduce the genetic information
and not to increase it.”40
In
any case, slight mutational changes are usually insignificant, but major
genetic mutations, instead of producing improved organisms, are generally
harmful to the species. Author Peo C. Koller (Chromosomes and Genes, 1971) tells us: “The greatest proportion of
mutations are deleterious to the individual who carries the mutated gene. It
was found in experiments that, for every successful or useful mutation, there
are many thousands which are harmful.”41 The Encylopedia Americana says that “mutants illustrated in biology
textbooks are a collection of freaks and monstrosities, and mutation seems to
be a destructive rather than a constructive process.”42
Author
G. Ledyard Stebbins (Processes of Organic
Evolution, 1971) relates that in laboratory experiments, mutated insects
were kept with normal members of their species. “After a greater or lesser
number of generations the mutants are eliminated.”43 They were unable
to compete and died off, because they had become less adapted for survival than
their normal fellows.
Statistically improbable. Researchers often
conduct experiments with fruit flies, chosen for their short life spans. Gordon
Rattray Taylor, former chief science advisor of BBC TV (The Great Evolution Mystery, 1983), observed: “It is a striking,
but not much mentioned fact that, though geneticists have been breeding
fruit-flies for sixty years or more in labs all round the world -- flies which
produce a new generation every eleven days -- they have never yet seen the
emergence of a new species or even a new enzyme.”44 Although fruit
flies can be made to mutate into deformed specimens, they are all still fruit
flies.
Co-authors
P. Moorhead and M. Kaplan (“Mathematical Challenges to the Neo-Darwinian
Interpretation of Evolution,” 1967) report: “The Wistar Institute symposium in
1967 brought together leading biologists and mathematicians in what turned out
to be a futile attempt to find a mathematically reasonable basis for the
assumption that random mutations are the driving force behind evolution.
Unfortunately, each time the mathematics showed the statistical improbability
of a given assumption…”45
Pierre-Paul
Grasse, former
Anti-mutation mechanisms.
Two British
scientists, Dr. A.R. Fersht and Dr. G.R. Lambert, made an important “discovery
that enzymes exist within living cells that have just one assignment in nature.
They find and correct any errors in the genetic code. These errors can creep
into the code because of radiation, some chemicals, or for other reasons.
However, these enzymes faithfully correct any errors, preventing mutations.”47
Francis Hitching (The Neck of the Giraffe,
1982) adds: “Genes are a powerful stabilizing mechanism whose main function is
to prevent new forms evolving.”48
The
law of genetics dictates that the offspring of the parent organism shall be of
the same species. This is exactly what the Bible teaches: “But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his
own body. All flesh is not the same flesh: but there is one kind of flesh of
men, another flesh of beasts, another of fishes, and another of birds” (1
Cor
Microevolution
vs. macroevolution
Pierre-Paul
Grasse, a zoologist, observed that adaptations within species have nothing to
do with evolution. They are just minor changes around a stable genotype. For
example, there are no less than 200 breeds of dog today, descended from just a
few ancient dogs and wolves. They range from tiny
In
breeding experiments, scientists have tried to keep modifying selected plants
and animals indefinitely by crossbreeding to see if they could develop new
species. Result? “Breeders usually find that after a few generations, an
optimum is reached beyond which further improvement is impossible, and there
has been no new species formed… Breeding procedures, therefore, would seem to
refute, rather than support evolution.”49
Microevolution in reverse. In the 1930s
brothers Heinz and Lutz Heck, Munich Zoo and Berlin Zoo directors,
respectively, recreated extinct animals. First was the tarpan, a Stone Age
horse whose drawings were on the walls of caves in
They
had actually followed their father, who, while running the Berlin Zoo, crossed
the ibex (a wild goat) with domesticated goats. The older Heck produced animals
with the exact color of the bezoar, the Middle Eastern wild goat that was the
progenitor of all goats today.
The
Heck brothers also recreated the auroch, the ancestor of modern cattle. The
last of the huge auroch, which weighed up to a ton, died in a game preserve in
36Loren C. Eiseley, Darwin and the Mysterious Mr. X, 1979, pp. 45–80
37Wallace, Alfred Russell, Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Student and Home Edition
38Ashley Montagu, quoted by Luther D. Sunderland in Darwin’s Enigma, 1984, p. 119
39George Gaylord Simpson and William S. Beck, Life: An Introduction to Biology, 1965, p. 241
40Lee Spetner, Not by Chance, 1996, p. 138
41Peo C. Koller, Chromosomes and Genes, 1971, p. 127
42Encyclopedia Americana, 1977, Vol. 10, p. 742
43G. Ledyard Stebbins, Processes of Organic Evolution, 1971, pp. 24-25
44Gordon Rattray Taylor, The Great Evolution Mystery, 1983, p. 48
45P. Moorhead and M. Kaplan, “Mathematical Challenges to the Neo-Darwinian Interpretation of Evolution,” Proceedings of the Symposium, Wistar Institute of Biology, 1967; cited by Schroeder, op. cit. p. 119
46Pierre-Paul Grasse, Evolution of Living Organisms, 1977, pp. 88,103
47Martin Hunter, “There’s a Lot of Holes in Evolutionary Theory,” May 12, 1998, tract
48Francis Hitching, The Neck of the Giraffe, 1982, p. 103
49On Call, July 3, 1972, pp. 8,9
50“Turning Back Nature’s Clock,” Strange Stories, Amazing Facts, 1975, pp. 104-105
(Excerpted from
Chapter 5, Early Earth Enigmas, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the
Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)