Page 103 - Confessions of the Evolutionists
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101




                    CHAPTER 13.
                    CHAPTER 13.





               EVOLUTIONISTS' CONFESSIONS THAT
               THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION CANNOT
                     ACCOUNT FOR THE ORIGIN OF

                                     MAMMALS

          A            ccording to the evolutionist scenario, reptiles are the ancestors
           A


                       of birds, just as they are of mammals. Yet there are huge struc-

                       tural differences between reptiles-whose bodies are covered in
            scales, whose blood is cold, and who reproduce by laying eggs-and mam-
            mals, whose bodies are covered in fur, which are warm blooded and re-
            produce by giving birth.
                 In the same way that no biological or physiological explanation of
            how reptiles supposedly turned into mammals has ever been given, so
            evolutionists cannot cite even a single intermediate form fossil to indicate
            that such a transition ever took place.
                 Moreover, it is impossible even to imagine such a transition, as

            first admitted by Charles Darwin, the founder of the theory:
                 I cannot conceive any existing reptile being converted into a mammal. 259
                 Roger Lewin is a well-known evolutionist science writer and for-
            mer editor of New Scientist magazine:
                 The transition to the first mammal... is still an enigma.260
                 George Gaylord Simpson is one of the main evolution authorities
                 th
            of 20 century and one of the founders of Neo-Darwinist theory:
                 The most puzzling event in the history of life on Earth is the change from
                 the Mesozoic, the Age of Reptiles, to the Age of Mammals. It is as if the
                 curtain were rung down suddenly on the stage where all the leading roles
                 were taken by reptiles, especially dinosaurs, in great numbers and bewil-
                 dering variety, and rose again immediately to reveal the same setting but
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