Page 15 - The Cambrian Evidence that Darwin Failed to Comprehend
P. 15

A         s Charles Darwin was forced




                                   to admit, “I remember well the
                                   time when the thought of the
                    [structure of the] eye made me cold all over.”
                        One of the main reasons why was that his theory
                   was unable to account for the eyeball’s flawless struc-
                  tures and complexity. The illusory mechanisms of evolu-
                  tion could not have given rise to such a complex organ. To
                  prove that the eye could have come into being through the
                  imaginary phases of evolution, Darwin needed
                  to reduce the eye’s components to very simple
                  forms—but this he was unable to do.
                      How did such a complex organ
                  emerge? The lack of any explanation is as
                  great a dilemma for present-day adher-
                   ents of the theory of evolution as it
                   was for its original architects.
                    Darwinists encounter this dilemma
                     wherever they encounter com-
                      plexity. How could such intri-
                        cate variety have come into
                          existence by way of a trial-
                            and-error process that,
                              they maintained, took
                                 place over the course
                                    of  millions   of

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