SilvrDog's forum posts
Ok, I found some quotes from respected Evolutionists
"We do not know how life bean." Ann H. Morgan, evolutionist
"The best place to start the evolution of the vertebrates is in the imagination." Homer Smith, evolutionist
"If there has been evolution of life, the absence of the requisite fossils in the rocks older than the Cambrian is puzzling." Marshall Kay and Edwin Colbert, evolutionists
"As of yet we have not been able to trace the phylogenetic history of a single group of modern plants from their beginning to the present." C. A. Arnold, evolutionist
"The first and most important steps of Animal evolution remains even more obscure than those of plant evolution."
Paul Weiss, evolutionist
"Darwin's hypothesis of evolution proposed that one kind of organism gradually changes into another kind over many generations by means of slight changes in each generation.
These slight changes in each generation are called Transitional Forms or missing links.
If evolution was true then there would be many forms of intermediate forms, but this is not the case. There are great gaps between each kind of organism. The Fossil record reports fish and amphibians but not half amphibians. It also reports reptiles and birds but no half reptiles or half birds.
The fact that no forms have been found is the greatest evidence against the whole evolution theory. Darwin even recognized this problem.
"The number of intermediate varieties, which have formerly existed on earth, must be truly enormous. Why then is not every geological formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links? Geology assuredly does not reveal and such finely graduated organic chain; and this perhaps, is the most obvious and gravest objection which can be urged against my theory."
Since Darwin wrote these words, over 100 million fossils, representing a quarter of a million species, have excavated. Yet not one transitional fossil has been found so far.
To me this seems to prove the whole evolution theory wrong, which just those little facts."
I got this from a Science Today magazine.
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