D
Dr. George Wald, Evolutionist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Science
"When it comes to the origin of life on this earth, there are only two possibilities: creation or spontaneous generation (evolution). There is no third way. Spontaneous generation was disproved 100 years ago, but that leads us only to one other conclusion: that of supernatural creation. We cannot accept that on philosophical grounds (personal reasons); therefore, we choose to believe the impossible: that life arose spontaneously by chance." George Wald
I respect that guy because he at least admits it. Abiogenesis isn't possible, the rest of the theory (I'm not speaking of a species ability to adapt, I'm talking about evolution from single celled primitive life into complex forms that we see today) hinges on random mutation. One has to believe that our complex biological systems are purely random, no design whatsoever. Nobody really believes it's possible for beings like ourselves to just spontaneously assemble randomly. This is why Natural Selection is so over emphasized and the claim is made that it somehow makes it "non-random" when there is no input given to the organism by Natural Selection (Proponents of the theory know that people will not accept the theory at all if the random aspect of it is emphasized). All Natural Selection means is that a species will die if it cannot survive and reproduce at a sufficient rate. That's common sense. It doesn't change the fact that you must believe that we are products of randomness and that life spontaneously arose by itself (with all evidence pointing to the contrary).
It's clear that people who believe the theory only believe it because they choose to. Some take a middle ground because they are overly influenced by secular science but most don't like the philosophical implications that it makes if one is to accept the existence of a creator. I for one respect George Wald, because at least he has enough respect for reason to admit that fact.
"When it comes to the origin of life on this earth, there are only two possibilities: creation or spontaneous generation (evolution). There is no third way. Spontaneous generation was disproved 100 years ago, but that leads us only to one other conclusion: that of supernatural creation. We cannot accept that on philosophical grounds (personal reasons); therefore, we choose to believe the impossible: that life arose spontaneously by chance." George Wald
I respect that guy because he at least admits it. Abiogenesis isn't possible, the rest of the theory (I'm not speaking of a species ability to adapt, I'm talking about evolution from single celled primitive life into complex forms that we see today) hinges on random mutation. One has to believe that our complex biological systems are purely random, no design whatsoever. Nobody really believes it's possible for beings like ourselves to just spontaneously assemble randomly. This is why Natural Selection is so over emphasized and the claim is made that it somehow makes it "non-random" when there is no input given to the organism by Natural Selection (Proponents of the theory know that people will not accept the theory at all if the random aspect of it is emphasized). All Natural Selection means is that a species will die if it cannot survive and reproduce at a sufficient rate. That's common sense. It doesn't change the fact that you must believe that we are products of randomness and that life spontaneously arose by itself (with all evidence pointing to the contrary).
It's clear that people who believe the theory only believe it because they choose to. Some take a middle ground because they are overly influenced by secular science but most don't like the philosophical implications that it makes if one is to accept the existence of a creator. I for one respect George Wald, because at least he has enough respect for reason to admit that fact.