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Darwin, Newton, and Einstein: At the End of Their Rope

Darwin, Newton, and Einstein: At the End of Their Rope



Cell phones, ipods, GPS, the Internet, computers, telescopes, microscopes, and even Federal Express envelopes. Our technological gadgets have certainly made life a lot easier for most of us. In the last 100 years mankind has harnessed electricity the likes of which no one before him had ever dreamed. We can do little but stand back and marvel. We marvel even more when we discover how simple the devices are. Most of these technologies are offshoots of one basic discovery – digital processing using zeroes and ones, or “on and off” switches, that operate at lightning speed. Once you discover the core principle you can modify it in multitudinous ways. It is similar to discovering a theme in music. Beethoven, after agonizing for thirty years, finally found the basic 15-note musical structure for his ninth symphony. It was then just a matter of applying and reapplying that theme in a dozen different ways to give us his beautiful melody. Applying the themes is easy; finding the themes is difficult. It is a combination of inspiration and imagination that no one can quite put his finger on as to where it originates in the human mind. Darwin Predictions Unrealized So, in one sense, we can certainly marvel over the advances of science. But there is a darker side to consider – the side in which interpretations of the scientific data are heavily influenced by one’s world view or general philosophy. Although somehow the latest polls show that scientists retain an image of impeccable honesty (as opposed to used car salesmen), the reality is, most scientists are inordinately influenced by atheism, and their interpretations of the data which they see in their microscopes and telescopes follows accordingly. Scientific American did a study a few years ago and found about 90% of published scientists are atheists. Those who believe in God are forced either to keep silent or capitulate to the reigning paradigm. Take Darwin’s theory of evolution, for example. Darwin predicted that, if his theory were true, we should find intermediate fossils all over the earth (e.g., a fossil showing intermediate stages between an amphibian and a reptile). To date, modern science hasn’t found one such specimen. So bad is the dearth that the leading evolutionist of the twentieth century, Stephen Gould of Harvard, proposed that evolution must now be modified to “punctuated equilibrium,” that is, that intermediary stages happened so fast there wasn’t enough time for them to be fossilized! These kinds of problems continue to plague evolutionary science. Volumes have been written describing its teetering at the abyss of falsification by such reputable critics as Behe, Demski, Gish, Berthault, and many others. Recently, one of evolution’s more glaring anomalies surfaced with the discovery of soft tissue in the carcass of a Tyrannosaurus Rex. The story was covered by Scientific American in its December 2010 issue, with the title “Blood from Stone.” The story is written by field researcher Mary Schweitzer of North Carolina State University who, after excavating the T-rex, watched the crane accidentally break one of its bones. When Dr. Schweitzer looked inside, to her absolute astonishment she saw not only blood cells but the veins and arteries to carry them, which vessels she described as very pliable and resilient as if they were still fresh (see Video #7 at catholicintl.com). But because evolution must fit all past events into a pre-arranged timetable, it has always insisted that a T-Rex cannot be less than 68 million years old. Yet modern biological science says, even with the best efforts of preservation, nucleated blood cells couldn’t survive even 7,000 years, much less 10,000 times that age.