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The Deception of Evolution

             Similarly, maggots developing in rotting meat was assumed to
          be evidence of spontaneous generation. However, it was later un-
          derstood that worms did not appear on meat spontaneously, but
          were carried there by flies in the form of larvae, invisible to the
          naked eye.
             Even when Darwin wrote The Origin of Species, the belief that
          bacteria could come into existence from non-living matter was
          widely accepted in the world of science.
             However, five years after the publication of Darwin's book,

          Louis Pasteur announced his results after long studies and experi-
          ments, that disproved spontaneous generation, a cornerstone of
          Darwin's theory. In his triumphal lecture at the Sorbonne in 1864,
          Pasteur said: "Never will the doctrine of spontaneous generation re-
          cover from the mortal blow struck by this simple experiment." 1
             For a long time, advocates of the theory of evolution resisted
          these findings. However, as the development of science unraveled
          the complex structure of the cell of a living being, the idea that life
          could come into being coincidentally faced an even greater impasse.


             Inconclusive Efforts in the Twentieth Century

             The first evolutionist who took up the subject of the origin of life
          in the twentieth century was the renowned Russian biologist
          Alexander Oparin. With various theses he advanced in the 1930s, he
          tried to prove that a living cell could originate by coincidence. These
          studies, however, were doomed to failure, and Oparin had to make
          the following confession:
             Unfortunately, however, the problem of the origin of the cell is
             perhaps the most obscure point in the whole study of the evolu-
             tion of organisms. 2




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