12 Quotes from Leading Evolutionists
Evolution is science? It is admittedly
unobservable, lacking fossil evidence, dependent upon scientific consensus,
and essentially a belief system about past life on Earth. The following 12
quotes are from leading and well known scientists and researchers. A larger
work with 130 similar quotes is available: "The Revised Quote Book",
edited by Dr. A. Snelling, PhD, pub. by: Creation Science Foundation,
Australia
"The absence of fossil evidence for intermediary stages between major
transitions in organic design, indeed our inability, even in our imagination, to
construct functional intermediates in many cases, has been a persistent and
nagging problem for gradualistic accounts of evolution."
Stephen Jay Gould (Professor of Geology and Paleontology, Harvard
University), "Is a new and general theory of evolution emerging?" Paleobiology,
vol. 6(1), January 1980, p. 127
"Contrary to what most scientists write, the fossil record does not support
the Darwinian theory of evolution because it is this theory (there are several)
which we use to interpret the fossil record. By doing so we are guilty of
circular reasoning if we then say the fossil record supports this theory."
Ronald R. West, PhD (paleoecology and geology) (Assistant Professor of
Paleobiology at Kansas State University), "Paleoecology and uniformitarianism".
Compass, vol. 45, May 1968, p. 216
"The chance that higher life forms might have emerged in this way is
comparable with the chance that 'a tornado sweeping through a junk yard might
assemble a Boeing 747 from the materials therein'."
Sir Fred Hoyle (English astronomer, Professor of Astronomy at Cambridge
University), as quoted in "Hoyle on Evolution". Nature, vol. 294, 12 Nov. 1981,
p. 105
"Echoing the criticism made of his father's habilis skulls, he added
that Lucy's skull was so incomplete that most of it was 'imagination made of
plaster of Paris', thus making it impossible to draw any firm conclusion about
what species she belonged to."
Referring to comments made by Richard Leakey (Director of National Museums
of Kenya) in The Weekend Australian, 7-8 May 1983, Magazine, p. 3
"The entire hominid collection known today would barely cover a billiard
table, ... the collection is so tantalizingly incomplete, and the specimens
themselves often so fragmented and inconclusive, that more can be said about
what is missing than about what is present. ...but ever since Darwin's work
inspired the notion that fossils linking modern man and extinct ancestor would
provide the most convincing proof of human evolution, preconceptions have led
evidence by the nose in the study of fossil man."
John Reader (photo-journalist and author of "Missing Links"), "Whatever
happened to Zinjanthropus?" New Scientist, 26 March 1981, p. 802
"A five million-year-old piece of bone that was thought to be a collarbone of
a humanlike creature is actually part of a dolphin rib, ...He [Dr. T. White]
puts the incident on par with two other embarrassing [sic] faux pas by
fossil hunters: Hesperopithecus, the fossil pig's tooth that was cited as
evidence of very early man in North America, and Eoanthropus or 'Piltdown
Man,' the jaw of an orangutan and the skull of a modern human that were claimed
to be the 'earliest Englishman'.
"The problem with a lot of anthropologists is that they want so much to find
a hominid that any scrap of bone becomes a hominid bone.'"
Dr. Tim White (anthropologist, University of California, Berkeley). As
quoted by Ian Anderson "Hominoid collarbone exposed as dolphin's rib", in New
Scientist, 28 April 1983, p. 199
"We add that it would be all too easy to object that mutations have no
evolutionary effect because they are eliminated by natural selection. Lethal
mutations (the worst kind) are effectively eliminated, but others persist as
alleles. ...Mutants are present within every population, from bacteria to man.
There can be no doubt about it. But for the evolutionist, the essential lies
elsewhere: in the fact that mutations do not coincide with evolution."
Pierre-Paul Grassé (University of Paris and past-President, French
Academie des Sciences) in Evolution of Living Organisms, Academic Press, New
York, 1977, p. 88
"The essence of Darwinism lies in a single phrase: natural selection is the
creative force of evolutionary change. No one denies that natural selection will
play a negative role in eliminating the unfit. Darwinian theories require that
it create the fit as well."
Stephen Jay Gould (Professor of Geology and Paleontology, Harvard
University), "The return of hopeful monsters". Natural History, vol. LXXXVI(6),
June-Jule 1977, p. 28
"And in man is a three-pound brain which, as far as we know, is the most
complex and orderly arrangement of matter in the universe."
Dr. Isaac Asimov (biochemist; was a Professor at Boston University School
of Medicine; internationally known author), "In the game of energy and
thermodynamics you can't even break even.". Smithsonian Institute Journal, June
1970, p. 10
"Why do geologists and archeologists still spend their scarce money on costly
radiocarbon determinations? They do so because occasional dates appear to be
useful. While the method cannot be counted on to give good, unequivocal results,
the number do impress people, and save them the trouble of thinking excessively.
Expressed in what look like precise calendar years, figures seem somehow better
... 'Absolute' dates determined by a laboratory carry a lot of weight, and are
extremely helpful in bolstering weak arguments.
"No matter how 'useful' it is, though, the radiocarbon method is still not
capable of yielding accurate and reliable results. There are gross
discrepancies, the chronology is uneven and relative, and the accepted dates are
actually selected dates. This whole bless thing is nothing but 13th-century
alchemy, and it all depends upon which funny paper you read."
Robert E. Lee, "Radiocarbon: ages in error". Anthropological Journal of
Canada, vol.19(3), 1981, pp.9-29. Reprinted in the Creation Research Society
Quarterly, vol. 19(2), September 1982, pp. 117-127 (quotes from pp. 123 and 125)
"The intelligent layman has long suspected circular reasoning in the use of
rocks to date fossils and fossils to date rocks. The geologist has never
bothered to think of a good reply, feeling that explanations are not worth the
trouble as long as the work brings results. This is supposed to be hard-headed
pragmatism."
J. E. O'Rourks, "Pragmatism versus materialism in stratigraphy". American
Journal of Science, vol. 276, January 1976, p. 47
"Scientists who go about teaching that evolution is a fact of life are great
con-men, and the story they are telling may be the greatest hoax ever. In
explaining evolution, we do not have one iota of fact."
Dr. T. N. Tahmisian (Atomic Energy Commission, USA) in "The Fresno Bee",
August 20, 1959. As quoted by N. J. Mitchell, Evolution and the Emperor's New
Clothes, Roydon Publications, UK, 1983, title page.
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