Page 195 - What Darwinists Fail To Consider
P. 195

Adnan Oktar





             many countries, and particularly the United States, have begun to ad-
             mit that Creation is the sole reality indicated. By scientific evidence, the
             Darwinian spell is being lifted and materialism, its most frequently em-
             ployed weapon, is being eradicated.
                  In the words of Stephen M. Barr, science shows the existence of
             Allah, and more and more people are coming to recognize this every
             day:

                  Science has taken us on just such an adventure. Armed not with weapons but
                  with telescopes and particle accelerators, and speaking by the signs and symbols
                  of recondite mathematics, it has brought us to many strange shores and shown
                  us alien and fantastic landscapes. But as we scan the horizon, near the end of the
                  voyage, we have begun to recognize first one and then another of the old familiar
                  landmarks and outlines of our ancestral home. The search for truth always leads
                  us, in the end, back to God.  66
                  Stephen M. Barr, theoretical particle physicist



                      New fossil discoveries are fitted into this preexisting
                      story. We call these new discoveries “missing links,”, as
                      if the chain of ancestry and descent were a real object
                      for our contemplation, and not what it really is: a com-
                      pletely human invention created after the fact, shaped
                      to accord with human prejudices.  67
                      Henry Gee, Editor of Nature magazine,






                         From our vantage point in the present, we arrange
                         fossils in an order that reflects gradual acquisition
                         of what we see in ourselves. We do not seek the
                         truth, we create it after the fact, to suit our own
                         prejudices. . . . .  68
                         Henry Gee, Editor of Nature magazine,





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