Page 141 - Global Freemasonry
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Harun Yahya (Adnan Oktar)

            not have the weight of a scientific theory; it was merely the expression of a
            naturalist doctrine that accepts that nature has creative power.



                 MASONS AND THE NATURALIST PHILOSOPHY
                 As for the theory of natural selection that we supposed to be Dar-
            win's one particular contribution, it too was merely a theory put forward
            earlier by a number of scientists. But, the scientists before Darwin's time
            did not apply the theory of natural selection as an argument against Cre-
            ation; on the contrary, they saw it as a mechanism generated by the Cre-
            ator to protect the species from a hereditary distortion. Just like Karl Marx

            took the idealist Hegel's concept of "dialectics," and bent it to fit his own
            philosophy, so did Darwin take the theory of natural selection from Cre-
            ationist scientists and used it in a way so as to fit the idea of naturalism.
                 Therefore, Darwin's personal contribution in the formulation of Dar-
            winism must not be overstated. The philosophical concepts he used were

            invented by earlier philosophers of naturalism. If Darwin had not pro-
            posed the theory of evolution, someone else would have. In fact, a theory
            very similar to his was proposed at the same period by another English
            natural scientist by the name of Alfred Russell Wallace; it was for this rea-
            son that Darwin was hasty to publish the Origin of the Species.
                 Finally, Darwin appeared at a stage when the long struggle had
            begun in Europe to supposedly destroy faith in Allah and religion, replace

            it with the naturalist philosophy and a humanist model for human life.
            The most significant force behind this struggle was not this or that thinker,
            but the Masonic organization, of which so many thinkers, ideologues and
            political leaders were members.
                 This fact was recognized and expressed by several Christians of the

            time. Pope Leo XIII, the leader of the world's Catholics, issued a famous
            bull in 1884, entitled Humanum Genus in which he made many important
            statements about Masonry and its activities. He wrote:




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