Page 14 - The Disasters Darwinism Brought To Humanity
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14 T T H E D I S A S T E R S D A R W I N I S M B R O U G H T T O H U M A N I T Y Y
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A picture depicting the
Sumerian water god.
Just like the Sumeri-
ans, Darwinists
believe that life
emerged by coinci-
dence from water. In
other words, they see
water as a god which
created life.
These two concepts, each a myth belonging to idol-worshipping cul-
tures, appeared in the modern world in the 18th century. Some European
thinkers who studied ancient Greek sources took a liking to materialism.
The common feature of these thinkers was that they were opponents of
religion.
In this environment the first person to take the theory of evolution on
in a detailed way was the French biologist Jean Baptiste Lamarck. In his
theory, which would later be understood to be false, Lamarck proposed
that all living creatures evolved from one another by small changes
throughout their lives. One person who repeated Lamarck's claims, in a
slightly different way, was Charles Darwin.
Darwin put forward this theory in his book The Origin of Species,
which he published in England in 1859. In this book, the myth of evolu-
tion, which had come down from ancient Sumer, was put forward in some
detail. He claimed that all species of living creatures came from one ances-
tor, born by chance in the water, and that they had grown different from
one another by small changes which came about by coincidence.
This claim of Darwin's did not win much general acceptance from
the men of science of his time. Fossil experts in particular were aware that
Darwin's claim was nothing but the product of a fantasy. But despite this