Page 205 - The Microworld Miracle
P. 205
This superior artistry brings with it insuperable obstacles for
the theory of evolution. Every aspect of the world possesses its own
innumerable details. It is impossible for a theory based on coinci-
dence to account for even one of these details. The microorganisms
we have examined here make a very strong refutation of the theory
of evolution, according to which, the first living thing to appear and
later, gradually evolve, was a microorganism.
Fictitious classifications divide animals and plants into various
phyla, classes, and orders, and it is claimed that each division
evolved from the one before. Again according to this theory, the liv-
ing world with its present extraordinary variety constitutes the lat-
est branches of this fictitious tree, or which a single-celled microor-
ganism is the common ancestor. If we now remove this microorgan-
ism from the tree, nothing will be left—neither animals, nor plants,
nor human beings, nor species. In short, nothing at all. In fact, all
the different features described throughout this book, and hun-
dreds of others besides, reveal that microorganisms cannot be the
works of chance. That being so, the so-called "first living thing" that
supposedly initiated evolution cannot have come into being spon-
taneously.
These tiny living things, which have co-existed alongside us
for millions of years and directly influence our lives, but whose ex-
istence we discovered only a century ago, display seemingly con- HARUN YAHYA
scious behavior. They can develop tactics like a strategist, devise
formulae like a chemist, and work like a laboratory technician. But
even these analogies fail to do them justice. A human may err or
forget, yet the chances of these microorganisms making a mistake (ADNAN OKTAR)
are virtually non-existent. They also possess capabilities superior to
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