there's only one peaceful religion, page-94

  1. 1,452 Posts.
    I see you're having trouble understanding what has been posted. Let me try again and this time I'll talk slower.



    The question was....

    Can you tell me anything you KNOW about Evolution? Any one thing? Any one thing that is true?


    Chromosome 46 isn't a truth as it isn't a fact. So according to science you haven't provided a truth. Shall I show you why you can't provide a truth and I'll use your gods Darwin & Huxley to explain it.

    Darwin said.

    "the belief in natural selection must at present be grounded entirely on general considerations. ... When we descend to details, we can prove that no one species has changed ... nor can we prove that the supposed changes are beneficial, which is the groundwork of the theory."

    Huxley said.


    "I beg you once more to recollect that I have no right to call my opinion anything but an act of philosophical faith."


    The apes said.

    Three monkeys sat on a coconut tree,
    Discussing things as they're said to be.
    Said one to the other,
    "Now listen you two,
    There's a certain rumor
    That can't be true ...
    That man descended from our noble race.
    The very idea is sure to disgrace."
    "No monkey ever deserted his wife,
    Starved her babies and ruined her life.
    And you've never known another monk,
    To leave her babies with others to bunk,
    Or pass them on from one to another."
    "And another thing you will never see ...
    Is a monk build a fence around a coconut tree;
    And let the coconuts go to waste,
    Forbidding all the other monks to taste."
    "Why, if I put a fence around this tree,
    Starvation would force you to steal from me."
    "And here's something else a monk won't do ...
    Go out at night and get on a stew;
    Or use a gun or club or knife,
    To take some other monkey's life."
    "Yes, man descended ... ornery cuss,
    But, brother, ... he didn't descend from us!

    ~ Author Unknown ~




    Huxley, Thomas Henry (1859), "Time and Life: Mr Darwin's "Origin of Species"", Macmillan's Magazine

    Darwin, Charles (1872), "The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life", Nature (6th ed.) (London: John Murray)

    Barlow, Nora, ed. (1963), "Darwin's Ornithological Notes", Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Historical Series 2
 
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