Page 116 - The Transitional Form Dilemma
P. 116

THE TRANSITIONAL-FORM DILEMMA




                    is astonishing that these gifts should have developed simultaneously. Some bi-
                    ologists speak of a predisposition of the genome. Can anyone actually recover
                    the predisposition, supposing that it actually existed? Was it present in the
                    first of the fish? The reality is that we are confronted with total conceptual
                    bankruptcy.  83
                    To conceal their hopeless position regarding the alleged evolution
               of Man, and also to console themselves, evolutionists set out fossils
               from various extinct species of apes and human races, in an imaginary
               order. None of these remains reveals a progression from ape-like crea-

               tures to Man. Evolutionists try to give the theory of evolution an alleged
               scientific appearance and credibility with imaginative models and
               drawings and biased interpretations of selected fossils.
                    Henry Gee, editor of Nature, stated in an article in the July 12, 2001,
               issue that the hominid (human-like) fossils that evolutionists claim to
               represent the ancestors of modern man, do not follow a progression
               from the primitive to the more advanced—and that on the contrary,
               these fossils appear suddenly in the record. The article also explains that






                                                 Nature, July 12, 2001


























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