About This Book
The author critiques contemporary evolutionary theories and argues that spontaneous generation and unguided material processes cannot account for the origin of life, heredity, or the construction of embryos. Reviewing positions from natural selection to Lamarckian ideas, he disputes explanations that rely on blind variation, inheritance of acquired traits, or chance differentiation, and contests claims about mechanisms like protective mimicry and sexual selection. Arguing that intellect, memory, will, and creative force are required to assemble atoms and cells into living forms, he offers analogies, such as minting coins, to claim each organism is a new, special creation and urges readers to consider his evidence and respond.
About the Author
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