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Evolution Bias
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EVIDENCE #2
Natural selection (the evolution mechanism, along with mutations)
is incapable of advancing an organism to a "higher-order".
It can be noted that natural selection as a driving mechanism for evolution
is totally inadequate. Natural selection (along with mutation) is said
to have caused organisms to evolve from one basic kind
(animals which can reproduce with one another) into another basic kind.
This is prohibited genetically since all of the information for the
development of an organism has already been encoded in the DNA of its
parent. Variation to organisms must remain within its basic kind. For
example, genetically, a wide variety of dogs can come to exist, but a dog
can never become anything other than a dog. It remains in its kind. It does
not have the genetic ability to become anything more. Admitting this,
evolutionists have tried to explain that natural selection happened
in conjunction with
mutations to the genetic code. This could not produce evolution, however,
since mutations do not create new genetic potential, they just alter what
is already there. Furthermore, mutations are small, random, and harmful
alterations to the genetic code. This also makes evolution from mutations
impossible. For example, a working wristwatch does not improve but is
harmed when its inside parts are randomly altered. Natural selection also
contradicts the second law of thermodynamics which states that, left to
themselves, all things tend to deteriorate rather than develop, while
evolution wants to go in the opposite direction.
"Survival of the fittest" demonstrates only how an organism has survived,
not how it has evolved.
- "All the `information' for the development of
each particular organism was already `encoded' in the DNA of its parent.
They must reproduce `after their kinds'." ([18], p.25)
- "There are great
numbers of `genes' (or DNA molecules) in each germ cell, and these can
be arranged in various ways to permit a wide range of variation in the
individual members of a basic `kind' of plant or animal, but the possible
range of variation is nevertheless limited to the basic genetic framework
of that particular `kind'." ([18], p.25)
- "The genetic system permits a wide
variety of specific features (eye color, height, shape of skull,
etc.) within the limits of a particular kind. These characteristics vary in
accordance with the Mendelian laws of heredity. Depending on factors such
as possible isolation and inbreeding, some of these characteristics become
fixed and a definite `race' established."
- "Although the number of
varieties or races that may be established from an original kind is
undoubtedly quite large, it is clear that there are definite limits to this
or even speciation has no true evolutionary significance. New varieties are
established, but not new kinds." ([18], p.26)
- "For example, all the different
races of dogs are simply variations and changes within the genetic
boundaries of the dog kind. Although there is ample evidence of changes
within kinds such as the various races of dogs, cats, horses, cows, etc.,
there has never been observed any changes across kinds, such as, for
example, a dog becoming a cat or a horse becoming a cow; such changes are
not possible since a dog does not have the information in its genes to
become a cat...It is the various distribution and recombination of genes
which ultimately produce the variations and physiological differences that
we find within a family unit, race, or natural species." ([22], p.7)
- In light
of these facts, evolutionists have turned to mutations (small, random and
almost always harmful changes in the genetic code) in the gene pool to
explain their theory, "The general picture of how evolution works is now
clear. The basic raw material is the mutant gene. Among these mutations
most will be deleterious, but a minority will be beneficial. These few will
be retained...". James F. Crow, a modern leader for evolution.
([19], p.47) Two
problems with claiming mutations to be the source of positive change are as
follows: "an accumulation of literally millions of such micro mutations
would be necessary to change one basic `kind' of plant or animal into
another" and "an even more serious difficulty is the fact that practically
all observed mutations are harmful, and usually even fatal, to the creature
experiencing them. Truly beneficial mutations are so rarely observed, and
even these are so questionable, as to leave their very existence still in
doubt. Even evolutionary geneticists readily acknowledge that 99.9% of all
observed mutations are harmful."
([18], p.27-28)
- Mutation are small, random,
and harmful or at best neutral to the organism, and rare. All four of these
characteristics make mutations impossible to bringing evolutionary change.
Any change that is random, because it is done to a highly ordered organism,
will be harmful or neutral. A random change done to a wristwatch will not
improve the watch. It will harm it or at very best, be neutral to it. An
earthquake does not develop a city, it brings destruction to it.
([22], p.7 and [18], p.27)
- "Living creatures are extremely intricate assemblies of
interrelated parts, and the parts themselves are also complex. It is
impossible to imagine how the parts could change in unison as a result of
chance mutation." ([11], p.32)
- "But, let us suppose, for the sake of
argument, that a beneficial mutation might occur; still the fact remains
that for every beneficial mutation there will be hundreds of harmful ones
so that the net effect, or result, over time will be that the harmful
mutations always win and will ultimately cause the organism, or even
species, to degenerate or die." ([22], p.8)
- "...mutations are incapable of
producing evolution because they can only alter and effect the existing
structure of genes: they cannot create new genetic material or new genetic
potential."
- "...only mutations produced in the genes of reproductive
cells, such as sperm in the male and ovum (or egg cell) in the female,
are passed on to
offspring. Changes produced in other body cells are not transmitted. For
example, if a woman were to lose a finger, her baby would not, as a result,
be born with a missing finger. Similarly, even if an ape ever learned to
walk upright, it could not pass this characteristic on to its descendants.
Thus, modern biology has disproved the once held theory that acquired
characteristics from the environment can be transmitted into the genetic
code of offspring." ([22], p.9)
- Survival of the fittest is a given but it
only explains how an organism survived not how it evolved. Survival
of the fittest is natural preservation not natural selection (evolution).
([22], p.11)
- Put another way, in regard to mutations, we can say, "Species
avoid genetic deterioration due to natural attrition among the
genetically unfit. Darwinists claim that the same force of attrition has a
building effect so powerful that it can begin with a bacterial cell and
gradually craft its descendants...to produce such wonders as trees,
flowers, ants, birds, and humans." ([11], p.16)
- Breeding reproduces those
animals with desired features. It is not evolution of the specimens.
It is also within kind not crossing kinds, and all changes through
breeding are lost after just a few generations. Breeding also, of course,
cannot produce new genetic material or the potential for such. Cloning is
the artificial stimulation of mitosis (cell division). It is not the
creation of life. ([4], p.37)
- Regarding the second law of thermodynamics
(universally accepted scientific law which states that all things left to
themselves will tend to run down) or the law of entropy, it is observed,
"It would hardly be possible to conceive of two more completely opposite
principles than this principle of entropy increase and the principle of
evolution. Each is precisely the converse of the other. As (Aldous) Huxley
defined it, evolution involves a continual increase of order, of
organization, of size, of complexity. It seems axiomatic that both cannot
possibly be true. But there is no question whatever that the second law of
thermodynamics is true." ([19], p.35)
- "...an excess inflow of `ordering
energy' into the system from outside may cause it temporarily to grow and
become more highly organized. Thus...a child may grow into an adult, or men
may build a structure. But each of these, and all other illustrations of
apparent decrease in entropy, are only local and temporary.""Negative
entropy (is required) for its maintenance." ([18], p.46)
- A seed, for
example, being genetically complete, provides the negative entropy for the
growth of a tree.
- Regarding the first law of thermodynamics (stating
that a constant amount of energy is maintained) it is observed, "...all
matter in the universe is some form of energy...(and) the total amount of
energy in the universe always remains constant (or the same), and,
therefore, energy itself is neither destroyed (that is, reduced to nothing)
or created from nothing by any natural process. ([19], p.32)
- These laws
state that any natural process would involve conservation (1st law) and
disintegration (2nd law). Evolution demands "integration and development"
and is therefore impossible. ([18], p.46)
- Regarding the validity of the
laws, we note, "These laws are based upon more evidence than any other
principles in science. They have been confirmed by countless thousands of
experiments on systems ranging in size from the nuclear to the astronomic,
and there is no known exception to either of them."
- It is noted that the `urge' to evolve is not at all found in
chemistry. ([4], p.357)
- In light
of all of these scientific objections to natural selection, perhaps
Darwin would have abandoned his own theory since he asserted, "If it could
be demonstrated that any complex organism existed which could not possibly
have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory
would absolutely break down."
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Evolution Bias
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