Page 146 - Confessions of the Evolutionists
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                      CHAPTER 18.
                      CHAPTER 18.





                      EVOLUTIONISTS' CONFESSIONS
                      STATING THAT THE THEORY OF
                      EVOLUTION CANNOT EXPLAIN

                                ANIMAL INSTINCTS

            M                any characteristics observed in living things represent
             M

                             enormous quandaries for the theory of evolution. Bees
                             and ants live together in enormous communities and ex-
                             hibit the finest examples of excellent, disciplined social
              life. Bees build those architectural marvels called honeycombs. Spiders
              spin such high-quality webs that technology is barely able to begin repli-
              cating them. Even the fiercest animals show devotion to their own young
              and even to other species. Countless other actions involving reason, judg-
              ment and decision-taking-features supposedly unique to human beings-
              cannot be explained in terms of any of the mechanisms proposed by the
              theory of evolution.
                   Evolutionists say that these modes of living, or behavior in living
              things emerged as the result of "impulses" from inside. However, they are
              unable to say what those impulses were.
                   Darwinists admit the fact that an enormous force affects the behav-
              ior of living things. They attribute the display of devotion, division of la-
              bor and perfect organization among life forms to direction by a force.
                   However, they then bring the issue to an end by simply referring to
              this force as instinct. To describe the origin of that force, they employ the
              clichéd term "Mother Nature."
                   In fact, however, no evolutionist to date can say where instincts are
              located in living things' bodies. In what part of the anatomy do these im-
              pulses, described as instincts, lie? In the brain, weighing just a few hun-
              dred grams? Or tucked away in some of the proteins and amino acids that
              make up the tissues?
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