Page 247 - Names of Allah
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findings. However, as the development of science unraveled the com-
        plex structure of the cell of a living being, the idea that life could come
        into being coincidentally faced an even greater impasse.

            INCONCLUSIVE EFFORTS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

           The first evolutionist who took up the subject of the origin of life in
        the twentieth century was the renowned Russian biologist Alexander
        Oparin. With various theses he advanced in the 1930s, he tried to prove
        that a living cell could originate by coincidence. These studies, how-
        ever, were doomed to failure, and Oparin had to make the following
        confession:

           Unfortunately, however, the problem of the origin of the cell is per-
           haps the most obscure point in the whole study of the evolution of
           organisms. 2

           Evolutionist followers of Oparin tried to carry out experiments to
        solve this problem. The best known experiment was carried out by the
        American chemist Stanley Miller in 1953. Combining the gases he al-
        leged to have existed in the primordial Earth’s atmosphere in an exper-
        iment set-up, and adding energy to the mixture, Miller synthesized
        several organic molecules (amino acids) present in the structure of pro-
        teins.
           Barely a few years had passed before it was revealed that this exper-
        iment, which was then presented as an important step in the name of
        evolution, was invalid, for the atmosphere used in the experiment was
        very different from the real Earth conditions. 3
           After a long silence, Miller confessed that the atmosphere medium
        he used was unrealistic. 4
           All the evolutionists’ efforts throughout the twentieth century to ex-
        plain the origin of life ended in failure. The geochemist Jeffrey Bada,
        from the San Diego Scripps Institute accepts this fact in an article pub-
        lished in Earth magazine in 1998:


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