Page 2 - The Miracle Of Talking Birds
P. 2
ome bird species have a talent
Srarely found in any other
creature except man. The best example of this are
parrots, which can imitate, in addition to human
speech, a wide range of sounds that even humans can’t
duplicate convincingly—for example, as the
creaking of a door, the cap being removed from
a bottle, a ringing telephone, or a tune being
whistled. This talent to imitate, observable in parrots and
some other bird species, is not an ability that can be acquired
by coincidence. All the wondrous characteristics of birds that
can imitate sounds are just part of the evidence God shows to
man so we may witness the magnificence of His creation.
In this book you will discover that talking birds use a
frequency modulation (FM) system, the working system of the
AM radios found in nearly all homes, that birds’ sound
recognition capacity is some 10 times greater than that of
humans, that birds can distinguish 10 different notes and many
other astonishing facts. You will see that the way these
creatures are equipped with the ability to speak and imitate
sounds is one of the countless miracles of creation, and at the
same time witness how that ability completely undermines the
theory of evolution.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
he author, who writes under the pen-name Harun
T T Yahya, was born in Ankara in 1956. He studied arts
at Istanbul's Mimar Sinan University, and philosophy at
Istanbul University. Since the 1980s, the author has
published many books on political, faith-related and
scientific issues. His main focus has been the refutation
of Darwinism and materialism, two modern myths
presented under a scientific guise. Harun Yahya's books appeal to all
kinds of readers, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, regardless of their age,
race, or nationality, for they focus on one objective: to broaden the
readers’ perspective by encouraging them to think about a number of
critical issues, such as the existence of God and His unity, and to display
the decrepit foundations and perverted works of godless systems.