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"If
it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could
not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications,
my theory would absolutely break down."
So
wrote Charles Darwin in the Origin of Species, where he made his theory
of evolution public. The theory applied materialist philosophy to nature
and challenged the consensus that life on earth is the artifact of the
Creator.
During the following 150 years, many in the scientific community assumed
that Darwin had almost accomplished this task.
Today,
science demonstrates that they were mistaken. Findings in the last two
decades alone have shattered the basis of the theory. Key branches of
science, such as paleontology, biochemistry, population genetics, comparative
anatomy, and biophysics, indicate one after another that natural laws
and chance effects proposed by the theory cannot explain the origin
of life. Life turns out to be infinitely more complex than Darwin
imagined in his time—demonstrating that his theory has absolutely
"broken down".
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