Page 176 - The Silent Language Of Evil
P. 176

THE SILENT LANGUAGE OF EVIL

            nisms" were understood to have, in reality, no evolutionary power.
                 Darwin based his evolution allegation entirely on the mecha-
            nism of "natural selection." The importance he placed on this mech-
            anism was evident in the name of his book: The Origin of Species, By
            Means of Natural Selection…
                 Natural selection holds that those living things that are
            stronger and more suited to the natural conditions of their habitats
            will survive in the struggle for life. For example, in a deer herd
            under the threat of attack by wild animals, those that can run faster
            will survive. Therefore, the deer herd will be comprised of faster
            and stronger individuals. However, unquestionably, this mecha-
            nism will not cause deer to evolve and transform themselves into
            another living species, for instance, horses.
                 Therefore, the mechanism of natural selection has no evolution-
            ary power. Darwin was also aware of this fact and had to state this in

            his book The Origin of Species:
                 Natural selection can do nothing until favourable individual differences
                 or variations occur. 7

                 Lamarck's Impact

                 So, how could these "favorable variations" occur? Darwin tried
            to answer this question from the standpoint of the primitive under-
            standing of science at that time. According to the French biologist
            Chevalier de Lamarck (1744-1829), who lived before Darwin, living
            creatures passed on the traits they acquired during their lifetime to
            the next generation. He asserted that these traits, which accumu-
            lated from one generation to another, caused new species to be
            formed. For instance, he claimed that giraffes evolved from an-
            telopes; as they struggled to eat the leaves of high trees, their necks


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