Page 236 - A Definitive Reply to Evolutionist Propagand‪a
P. 236

A DEFINITIVE REPLY
                                       TO EVOLUTIONIST
                                         PROPAGANDA

















                   The Perfect Flight Systems and

                   Technology in Living Things

                   It is impossible to account for the design in birds and the flight
               motion dependent on that design in terms of evolution. Flight pos-
               sesses the most complex aerodynamic properties, both in birds and
               in insects. The control of flight in birds and insects requires a nerv-
               ous system capable of flawlessly controlling the creature's muscles.
               In this system, known as neuromuscular control, the nerve cells are
               in constant communication with the muscle cells. After contracting
               with the instructions received from the nerve cells, the muscles send
               back a signal reporting their contracted state. When a bird rises,
               glides, or descends, this system is ready to provide the necessary
               aerodynamics.
                   The perfect flight systems in birds and insects is a source of in-
               spiration for engineers, who try to create the most productive de-
               signs with the best materials for the lowest cost, and who have
               begun to imitate this superior design in nature. For instance:
                   Like bird bones, the interiors of airplane wings are hollow.
               There are long, thin supports between the internal faces of the bone
               in order to maintain resistance. In flight engineering, similar struts
               inside the wing serve the purpose of a skeleton in the face of sud-
               den and severe air currents. Known as the "Warren's truss," it has
               been copied from birds. 9
                   The flaps on the plane wing used to control the plane's attitude
               have been set out to imitate the movement of the bird's wings as it
               comes in to land.



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