Page 64 - The Miracle of the Blood and Heart
P. 64
THE MIRACLE OF THE
BLOOD AND HEART
With its complex structure and the different forms it
exhibits in different species, hemoglobin constitutes a serious
dilemma for evolutionists. In his book The Great Evolution
Mystery, the evolutionist geneticist Gordon Rattray Taylor
makes the following admission:
Hemoglobin makes a haphazard appearance in the evolutionary
story, appearing in many different phyla. It is found in some species
of paramecium (very primitive single-celled creatures known to
every school biology class). It is found in worms, mollusks, insects
and even in the roots of leguminous vegetables. What it is doing in
all these places is largely unexplained. One thing seems clear, that
it was invented time and time again, quite independently. 30
This fact that Taylor had to admit despite being an evolu-
tionist is actually of the greatest importance. The way that
hemoglobin assumes different forms in different species, and
the fact that these forms do not fit into any imaginary evolu-
tionist schema, shows that this important molecule was creat-
ed specially and separately for every group of creatures. The
truth that Taylor prefers to describe as "being invented inde-
pendently" is in fact the truth of creation.
That same fact is detailed by the professor of biochemistry
Michael Denton in his book Evolution: A Theory in Crisis:
There is not a trace, at a molecular level, of the traditional evolu-
tionary series: fish to amphibian to reptile to mammal. Incredible,
man is closer to lamprey [in his hemoglobin] than are fish! 31
Moreover, as in all other complex organisms, hemoglo-
bin's complex structure is too sensitive to permit any random
mutations. If the amino acid sequence that forms the
hemoglobin protein is damaged, nothing remains but
a useless mass of amino acids. The chances of this
Harun
Yahya
62