Page 205 - The Miracle of Electricity in the Body
P. 205

Adnan Oktar (Harun Yahya)                          203






                 Lyall Watson, an evolutionist anthropologist, states that he doesn’t
            know how a human being with a large brain could have emerged in
            stages:
                 Modern apes, for instance, seem to have sprung out of nowhere. They have
                 no yesterday, no fossil record. And the true origin of modern humans—of
                 upright, naked, tool making, big-brained beings—is, if we are to be honest
                 with ourselves, an equally mysterious matter.  107
                 This all goes to show that claims of the human brain emerging
            through evolution are based on no scientific foundation. They are mere-
            ly imaginary scenarios stemming from philosophical preconceptions. To
            maintain that the human brain, with a design that no technology is able
            to match, emerged as the work of chance is equal to claiming that com-
            puters were not designed by engineers, but came into being by metals
            and plastics combining haphazardly together. A more consistent, logical
            approach would be to accept that since computers must have designers,
            then the brain’s infinitely superior design must have been designed, too.
            The evident truth is that the brain’s design is God’s creation.



                 Chance Cannot Ensure the Protection of the Brain

                 Since the brain controls our entire body, the slightest damage that
            might occur to it could give rise to irreparable consequences. Since a mil-
            limetric amount of damage can harm an enormous number of cells and
            connections, there would be serious repercussions in such fundamental
            processes as movement, perception and memory.
                 In the face of such possible dangers, however, the necessary precau-
            tions have been taken. The task of protecting the brain has been assumed
            by the skull of the required hardness, wholly surrounding the brain. No
            other organ in the body has been given its own separate protection in
            this way. Thanks to this effective precaution against possible blows, the
            brain can perform its vital functions perfectly. There can only be one ex-
            planation for the way that the bone cells are aware of the brain’s vital im-
            portance to the body, and come together to enfold the brain without in-
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