Page 19 - The Miracle in the Cell
P. 19
HARUN YAHYA
efore examining the extraordinary human cell,
it's a good idea to consider the faulty logic
behind the theory of evolution. Like every
long-standing deception, it has been care-
fully prepared, but within, it possesses dis-
crepancies of logic. We can explain this
mentality of evolutionary theory, composed of
complete fraudulent and deceitful scenarios, with an analogy:
Consider a remote-controlled toy car. Assume that the person
holding the remote control is hiding nearby. Another person observ-
ing this car will see its movements only, because he cannot perceive
the remote control or whoever is controlling it. He watches the car per-
forming quite intelligent feats, turning according to the path it's on
and making apparently conscious movements.
At this point, if the observer's principle is to believe only what he
perceives, then he will accept as real only the world he sees around
him. He will reject the possibility of another location that he cannot see
or that to which he has no access. He won't accept that there is an intel-
ligent mind who he can't see or hear, and that the car moves under this
person's command. And so, the person is left to think that the car
gained its ability to move about in so intelligent a manner as a result
of a series of coincidences-and he will then try to convince himself and
everyone around him of this explanation.
His next step will be to develop fictitious theories under the guise
of science to support this "belief," but which have no intelligent basis.
With a little imagination, the problem is solved, however unlikely the
whole scenario: The atoms that compose the car came together "coin-
cidentally" to form this complex mechanical structure. As a result of
their coming together accidentally and assembling into a complicated,
functional structure, the car also "evolved" such abstract qualities as
the ability to think, make decisions, and move about intelligently by
17