Saturday, June 27, 2009

Irreducible Complexities

"The world is too complicated in all its parts and interconnections to be due to chance alone. I am convinced that the existence of life with all its order in each of its organisms is simply too well put together. Each part of a living thing depends on all its other parts to function. How does each part know? How is each part specified at conception? The more one learns of bio-chemistry the more unbelievable it becomes unless there is a some type of organizing principle .... an architect. " Renowned scientist Allan Sandage

Darwinism says that natural selection has chosen and put together the components of life and thus things evolved to what they are today. But how can any part of a complex mechanism have been chosen without knowledge of what the next or best part would be to make the organism work. Did the eye socket evolve because it knew someday it would have to protect a delicate eye? Did the optic nerve develop one day because it knew that one day there would be an eyeball there that needed attachment to the brain? Did the eardrum one day appear and then wait for the intricate bones to come along so that sound could be interpreted for an auditory nerve that did not exist yet? Leaving such things to chance and mutation simply defies logic and reasoning. And yet today's school curriculum's simply state that 'nature chose through natural selection'. If one simple organism had evolved this way, it would have been a big enough miracle, but when the complexities of all nature that surround us are taken into consideration, it becomes simply preposterous.
People who reject intelligent design do so on religious grounds.

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