Page 477 - Pleasant Words from the Gospe
P. 477
Harun Yahya (Adnan Oktar)
there is, in fact, no such family tree branching out from ape-
like creatures to man.
Zuckerman also made an interesting "spectrum of science"
ranging from those he considered scientific to those he consid-
ered unscientific. According to Zuckerman's spectrum, the
most "scientific"–that is, depending on concrete data–fields of
science are chemistry and physics. After them come the biolog-
ical sciences and then the social sciences. At the far end of the
spectrum, which is the part considered to be most "unscientif-
ic," are "extra-sensory perception"–concepts such as telepathy
and sixth sense–and finally "human evolution." Zuckerman ex-
plains his reasoning:
We then move right off the register of objective truth into
those fields of presumed biological science, like extrasen-
sory perception or the interpretation of man's fossil histo-
ry, where to the faithful [evolutionist] anything is possible
– and where the ardent believer [in evolution] is some-
times able to believe several contradictory things at the
same time. 19
The tale of human evolution boils down to nothing but the
prejudiced interpretations of some fossils unearthed by certain
people, who blindly adhere to their theory.
Darwinian Formula!
Besides all the technical evidence we have dealt with so far,
let us now for once, examine what kind of a superstition the
evolutionists have with an example so simple as to be under-
stood even by children:
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