Page 177 - The Silent Language Of Evil
P. 177

Harun Yahya

        were extended from generation to generation.
             Darwin also gave similar examples. In his book The Origin of
        Species, for instance, he said that some bears going into water to find
        food transformed themselves into whales over time. 8
             However, the laws of inheritance discovered by Gregor Mendel
        (1822-84) and verified by the science of genetics, which flourished in
        the twentieth century, utterly demolished the legend that acquired
        traits were passed on to subsequent generations. Thus, natural selec-
        tion fell out of favor as an evolutionary mechanism.


             Neo-Darwinism and Mutations
             In order to find a solution, Darwinists advanced the "Modern
        Synthetic Theory," or as it is more commonly known, Neo-
        Darwinism, at the end of the 1930's. Neo-Darwinism added muta-
        tions, which are distortions formed in the genes of living beings due
        to such external factors as radiation or replication errors, as the
        "cause of favorable variations" in addition to natural mutation.
             Today, the model that stands for evolution in the world is Neo-
        Darwinism. The theory maintains that millions of living beings

        formed as a result of a process whereby numerous complex organs
        of these organisms (e.g., ears, eyes, lungs, and wings) underwent
        "mutations," that is, genetic disorders. Yet, there is an outright scien-
        tific fact that totally undermines this theory: Mutations do not cause
        living beings to develop; on the contrary, they are always harmful.
             The reason for this is very simple: DNA has a very complex
        structure, and random effects can only harm it. The American ge-
        neticist B. G. Ranganathan explains this as follows:
             First, genuine mutations are very rare in nature. Secondly, most muta-
             tions are harmful since they are random, rather than orderly changes in


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