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power. Darwin was also aware of this fact and had to state this in his
            book The Origin of Species:
               Natural selection can do nothing until favorable individual differ-
               ences or variations occur. 7



               LAMARCK’S IMPACT
               So, how could these “favorable variations” occur? Darwin tried to
            answer this question from the standpoint of the primitive understand-
            ing of science at that time. According to the French biologist Chevalier
            de Lamarck (1744-1829), who lived before Darwin, living creatures
            passed on the traits they acquired during their lifetime to the next gen-
            eration. He asserted that these traits, which accumulated from one
            generation to another, caused new species to be formed. For instance,
            he claimed that giraffes evolved from antelopes; as they struggled to
            eat the leaves of high trees, their necks were extended from generation
            to generation.
               Darwin also gave similar examples. In his book The Origin of Species,
            for instance, he said that some bears going into water to find food
            transformed themselves into whales over time. 8
               However, the laws of inheritance discovered by Gregor Mendel
            (1822-84) and verified by the science of genetics, which flourished in
            the twentieth century, utterly demolished the legend that acquired
            traits were passed on to subsequent generations. Thus, natural selec-
            tion fell out of favor as an evolutionary mechanism.


               NEO-DARWINISM AND MUTATIONS
               In order to find a solution, Darwinists advanced the “Modern
            Synthetic Theory,” or as it is more commonly known, Neo-Darwinism,
            at the end of the 1930’s. Neo-Darwinism added mutations, which are
            distortions formed in the genes of living beings due to such external

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