Page 177 - The Disasters Darwinism Brought To Humanity
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             T T H E   M I S C O N C E P T I O N   O F   E V O L U T I O N N  177
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                 me. Yet it also seems impossible to have one without the other. And so, at
                 first glance, one might have to conclude that life could never, in fact, have
                 originated by chemical means. 142
                 There is no doubt that if it is impossible for life to come about thro-
             ugh natural effects, then one must accept that life was "created" in a su-
             pernatural way. This truth openly invalidates the theory of evolution, the
             basic aim of which is to deny creation.
                 The Imaginary Mechanisms of Evolution
                 The second major point which invalidates Darwin's theory is the fact
             that it has been realised that the two concepts put forward by the theory
             as "evolutionary mechanisms" actually possess no evolutionary force.
                 Darwin had totally linked the claim of evolution which he put for-
             ward to "natural selection." The importance he attached to this mecha-
             nism can be clearly seen from the title of his book: The Origin of Species, By
             Means of Natural Selection…
                 It is based on the idea that in the struggle for survival in nature living
             creatures which are strong and adapted to the natural conditions will sur-
             vive. For example, when a herd of deer is threatened by beasts of prey,
             those deer which can run the fastest will survive. In this way the herd will
             consist of fast and powerful individuals. But of course this mechanism
             does not make deer evolve, it cannot turn them into another species, for
             example horses.
                 For this reason the mechanism of natural selection possesses no evo-
             lutionary force. Darwin was aware of this fact, and in The Origin of Species
             he was forced to say:
                 Natural selection can do nothing until favourable variations chance to oc-
                 cur. 143


                 The Influence of Lamarck

                 So, how did these "favourable variations" come about? Within the
             primitive scientific understanding of his time, Darwin tried to base the
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