Page 221 - A Definitive Reply to Evolutionist Propagand‪a
P. 221

HARUN YAHYA



               this transition but covers up this subject with common tactics used
               by evolutionists. The only example given in this area concerns an
               organ that the scorpion's imaginary ancestors are assumed to have
               possessed called the "wing," which allowed them to breathe under
               water. It is suggested that over time this organ became buried inside
               the body and gained the ability to take in oxygen from the air.
               However, not one fossil was shown to back up this claim, and the
               account was stranded on the level of fantasy.



                   Conclusion

                   The Cambrian Explosion shows that no such process as evolution
               ever occurred in natural history. It can be seen that such complex
               structures as the eye and antennae possess an astonishing design that
               can never be accounted for by random mutations. The spider's web in-
               dicates that even tiny animals possess a superior design that engineers
               seek to emulate, and demonstrates that the design in nature is so su-
               perior that it could never have come about by chance.
                   In short, Darwinist propaganda does not reflect the scientific
               facts. The scientific truth is that the arthropods and all the millions
               of other living species are the product of an intelligent design.










               1. Richard Monastersky, "Mysteries of the Orient," Discover, April 1993, p. 40.
               2. Richard Monastersky, "Mysteries of the Orient," Discover, April 1993, p. 40.
               3. Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker, London: W.W. Norton, 1986, p.
               229.
               4. Phillip E. Johnson, "Darwin's Rules of Reasoning," Darwinism: Science or
               Philosophy? by Buell Hearn, Foundation For Thought and Ethics, 1994, p.
               12.
               5. R.L. Gregory, Eye and Brain: The Physiology of Seeing, Oxford University
               Press, 1995, p. 31.





                                               219
   216   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226