History
of Evolution Part Two
1898 TO 1949
Bumpus’ Sparrows (1898). Herman Bumpus was a zoologist at Brown
University. During the winter of 1898, by accident, he carried out one of the
only field experiments in natural selection. One cold morning, finding 136
stunned house sparrows on the ground, he tried to nurse them back to health. Of
the total, 72 revived and 64 died. He weighed and carefully measured all of
them, and found that those closest to the average survived best. This frequently
quoted research study is another evidence that the animal or plant closest to
the original species is the most hardy. Sub-species variations will not be as
hardy, and evolution entirely across species (if the DNA code would permit it)
would therefore be too weakened to survive (R. Milner, Encyclopedia of
Evolution, 1990, p. 61).
Hugo deVries (1848-1935) was a Dutch botanist and one of the three men
who, in 1900, rediscovered Mendel’s paper on the law of heredity.
One day while working with primroses, deVries thought he had discovered a new
species. This made headlines. He actually had found a new variety (sub-species)
of the primrose, but deVries conjectured that perhaps his "new
species" had suddenly sprung into existence as a "mutation." He
theorized that new species "saltated" (leaped), that is, continually
spring into existence. His idea is called the saltation theory.
This was a new idea; and, during the first half of the 20th century, many
evolutionary biologists, finding absolutely no evidence supporting
"natural selection," switched from natural selection
("Darwinism") to mutations ("neo-Darwinism") as the
mechanism by which the theorized cross-species changes occurred.
Mutations cannot produce evolution either, for they are almost always harmful.
In addition, decades of experimentation have revealed they never produce new
kinds.
In order to prove the mutation theory, deVries and other researchers
immediately began experimentation on fruit flies; and it has continued ever
since--but totally without success in producing new species.
Ironically, deVries’ saltation theory was based on an observational error. In
1914 Edward Jeffries discovered that deVries’ primrose was just a new variety,
not a new species.
Decades later, it was discovered that most plant varieties are produced by
variations in gene factors, rarely by mutations. Those caused by gene
variations may be strong (although not as strong as the average original), but
those varieties produced by mutations are always weak and have a poor survival
rate.
Walter S. Sutton and T. Boveri (1902) independently discovered
chromosomes and the linkage of genetic characters. This was only two years
after Mendel’s research was rediscovered. Scientists were continually learning
new facts about the fixity of the kinds.
Thomas Hunt Morgan (1886-1945) was an American biologist who developed
the theory of the gene. He found that the genetic determinants were present in
a definite linear order in the chromosomes and could be somewhat
"mapped." He was the first to work intensively with the fruit fly, Drosophila
(Michael Pitman, Adam and Evolution, 1984, p. 70). But research with
fruit flies, and other creatures, has proved a total failure in showing
mutations to be a mechanism for cross-species change (Richard B. Goldschmidt,
"Evolution, as Viewed by One Geneticist," American Scientist, January
1952, p. 94).
H.J. Muller (1927). Upon learning of the 1927 discovery that X-rays,
gamma rays, and various chemicals could induce an extremely rapid increase of
mutations in the chromosomes of test animals and plants, Muller pioneered in
using X-rays to greatly increase the mutation rate in fruit flies. But all he
and the other researchers found was that mutations were always harmful (H.J.
Muller, Time, November 11, 1946, p. 38; E.J. Gardner, Principles of
Genetics, 1964, p. 192; Theodosius Dobzhansky, Genetics and the Origin
of the Species, 1951, p. 73).
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) was deeply indebted to the evolutionary
training he received in Germany as a young man. He fully accepted it, as well
as Haeckel’s recapitulation theory. Freud began his Introductory Lectures on
Psychoanalysis (1916) with Haeckel’s premise: "Each individual somehow
recapitulates in an abbreviated form the entire development of the human
race" (R. Milner, Encyclopedia of Evolution, 1990, p. 177).
Freud’s "Oedipus complex" was based on a theory of "primal
horde" he developed about a mental complex that caveman families had long
ago. His theories of anxiety complexes, and "oral" and
"anal" stages, etc., were based on his belief that our ancestors were
savage.
H.G. Wells (1866-1946), the science fiction pioneer based his
imaginative writings on evolutionary teachings. He had received a science
training under Professor Thomas H. Huxley, Darwin’s chief defender.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930), like a variety of other evolutionist
leaders before and after, was an avid spiritist. Many of his mystery stories
were based on evolutionary themes.
George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was so deeply involved in evolutionary
theory, that he openly declared that he wrote his plays to teach various
aspects of the theory (R. Milner, Encyclopedia of Evolution, 1990, p.
461).
Piltdown Man (1912). In 1912, parts of a jaw and skull were found in
England and dubbed "Piltdown Man." News of it created a sensation.
The report of a dentist, in 1916, who said someone had filed down the teeth was
ignored. In 1953 the fact that it was a total hoax was uncovered. This, like
all the later evidences that our ancestors were part ape, has been questioned
or repudiated by reputable scientists.
World War I (1917-1918). Darwinism basically taught that there is no
moral code, our ancestors were savage, and civilization only progressed by
violence against others. It therefore led to extreme nationalism, racism, and
warfare through Nazism and Fascism. Evolution was declared to involve
"natural selection"; and, in the struggle to survive, the fittest
will win out at the expense of their rivals. Frederich von Bernhard, a German
military officer, wrote a book in 1909 extolling evolution and appealing to
Germany to start another war. Heinrich von Treitsche, a Prussian militarist,
loudly called for war by Germany in order to fulfill its "evolutionary
destiny" (Heinrich G. von Treitsche, Politics, Vol. 1, pp. 66-67).
Their teachings were fully adopted by the German government, and it only waited
for a pretext to start the war (R. Milner, Encyclopedia of Evolution, 1990,
p. 59).
Communist Darwinism. Marx and Engels’ acceptance of evolutionary theory
made Darwin’s theory the "scientific" basis of all later communist
ideologies (Robert M. Young, "The Darwin Debate," in Marxism
Today, Vol. 26, April 1982, p. 21). Communist teaching declared that
evolutionary change, which taught class struggle, came by revolution and
violent uprisings. Communist dogma declares that Lamarckism (inheritance of
acquired characteristics) is the mechanism by which this is done. Mendelian
genetics was officially outlawed in Russia in 1948, since it was recognized as
disproving evolution. Communist theorists also settled on "synthetic
speciation" instead of natural selection or mutations as the mechanism for
species change (L.B. Halstead, "Museum of Errors," in Nature, November
20, 1980, p. 208). This concept is identical to the sudden change theory of
Goldschmidt and Gould.
John Dewey (1859-1952) was another influential thought leader. A
vigorous Darwinist, Dewey founded and led out in the "progressive
education movement" which so greatly affected U.S. educational history.
But it was nothing more than careful animal training (Samuel L. Blumenfeld, NEA:
Trojan Horse in American Education, 1984, p. 43). The purpose was to
indoctrinate the youth into evolution, humanism, and collectivism. In 1933,
Dewey became a charter member of the American Humanist Association and its
first president. Its basic statement of beliefs, published that year as the Humanist
Manifesto, became the unofficial framework of teaching in most school
textbooks. The evolutionists recognized that they must gain control of all
public education (Sir Julian Huxley, quoted in Sol Tax and Charles Callender
(eds.), Evolution after Darwin, 3 vols., 1960). Historically, American
education was based on morals and standards; but Dewey declared that, in order
to be "progressive," education must leave "the past" and
"evolve upward" to new, modern concepts.
The Scopes Trial (July 10 to July 21, 1925) was a powerful aid to the
cause of evolution, yet scientific discoveries were not involved. That was
unfortunate, since, except for a single tooth (later disproved), the
evolutionists had nothing worthwhile to present (The World’s Most Famous
Court Trial: A Complete Stenographic Report, 1925).
The ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) had been searching for someone they
could use to test the Butler Act, which forbade the teaching of evolution in
the public schools in Tennessee. John Scopes (24 at the time) volunteered for
the job. He later privately admitted that he had never actually taught
evolution in class, so the case was based on a fraud; he spent the time
teaching them football maneuvers (John Scopes, Center of the Storm, 1967,
p. 60). But no matter, the ACLU wanted to so humiliate the State of Tennessee,
that no other state would ever dare oppose the evolutionists. The entire
trial, widely reported as the "Tennessee Monkey Trial," was presented
to the public as something of a comic opera. (A trained ape was even sent in,
to walk around on a chain in the streets of Dayton.) But the objective was
deadly serious, and they succeeded very well. Although the verdict was
against Scopes, America’s politicians learned the lesson: Do not oppose the
evolutionists.
SCOPES TRIAL--Evolutionists turned the Dayton trial into ridiculous circus in
order to frighten later State governments into banning creationism from their
school curicula. The first event nationally broadcast over the radio, it was a
major victory for evolutionists throughout the world. Ridicule, side issues,
misinformation, and false statements were used to win the battle.
Nebraska Man Debunked (1928). In 1922 a single molar tooth was found
and named Hesperopithecus, or "Nebraska Man." An artist was
told to make an "apeman" picture based on the tooth, which
went around the world. Nebraska Man was a key evidence at the Scopes trial in
July 1925 (The evolutionists had little else to offer!). Grafton Smith, one of
those involved in publicizing Nebraska Man was knighted for his efforts in
making known this fabulous find. When paleontologists returned to the site in
1928, they found the rest of the skeleton,--and discovered the tooth belonged
to "an extinct pig"! (R. Milner, Encyclopedia of Evolution, 1990,
p. 322). In 1972, living specimens of the same pig were found in Paraguay.
George McCready Price (1870-1963) had a master’s level degree, but not
in science. Yet he was the staunchest opponent of evolution in the first half
of the 20th century. He produced 38 books and numerous articles to various journals.
Price was the first person to carefully research into the accumulated findings
of geologists, and he discovered that they had no evidence supporting their
claims about strata and fossils. Since his time, the situation has not changed
(R. Milner, Encyclopedia of Evolution, 1990, p. 194).
Along with mutations, the study of fossils and strata ranks as the leading
potential evidences supporting evolutionary claims. But no transitional species
have been found. Ancient species (aside from the extinct ones) were like those
today, except larger, and strata are generally missing and at times
switched--with "younger" strata below "older." Because
there is no fossil/strata evidence supporting evolution, the museums display
dinosaurs and other extinct animals as proof that evolution has occurred. But
extinction is not an evidence of evolution.
Oliver Wendel Holmes, Jr. (1841-1935), powerfully affected the U.S.
Supreme Court in both viewpoint and legal precedents. He was forceful in his
positions and a leading justice for 30 years. The prevalent view since his time
is that law is a product of evolution and should continually evolve in accord
with social policy. But this, of course, keeps taking America further and
further from the U.S. Constitution.
Vladimir (Nikolai) Lenin (1870-1924) and Josef Stalin (1879-1953).
Lenin was an ardent evolutionist who, in 1918, violently overthrew the Russian
government and founded the Soviet Union.
According to Yaroslavsky, a close friend of his, at an early age, while
attending a Christian Orthodox school, Stalin began to read Darwin and became
an atheist (E. Yaroslavsky, Landmarks in the Life of Stalin, 1940, pp.
8-9). Stalin was head of the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1953. During those
years, he was responsible for the death of millions of Russians who refused to
yield to his slave-state tactics. The Soviet Union under Stalin was an
outstanding example of Darwinist principles extended to an entire nation.
Austin H. Clark (1880-1954), an ardent evolutionist, was on the staff of
the Smithsonian Institute from 1908 to 1950 and a member of several important
scientific organizations. A prominent scientist, he authored several books and
about 600 scientific articles. But, after years of trying to disprove the fact
that there is no evidence of cross-species change, in 1930 he wrote an
astounding book, The New Evolution: Zoogenesis. In it, he cited fact
after fact, disproving the possibility that major types of plants and animals
could have evolved from one another. The book was breathtaking and could not be
answered by any evolutionist. His alternate proposal, zoogenesis, was
that every major type of plant and animal must have evolved--not from one
another--but directly from dirt and water! (A.H. Clark, The New Evolution:
Zoogenesis, 1930, pp. 211, 100, 189, 196, 114). The evolutionary world was
stunned into silence, for he was an expert who knew all the reasons why
trans-species evolution was impossible.
Richard Goldschmidt (1878-1958). The same year that Clark wrote his book
(1930), Goldschmidt gave up also. An earnest evolutionist, he had dedicated his
life to proving it by applying X-rays and chemicals to fruit flies at the
University of California, Berkeley, and producing large numbers of mutations in
them. After 25 exhausting years, in which he had worked with more generations
of fruit flies than humans and their ape ancestors are conjectured to have
lived on our planet, Goldschmidt decided that he must figure out a different
way that cross-species evolution could occur. For the next ten years, as he
continued his fruit fly research, he gathered more evidence of the foolishness
of evolutionary theory;--and, in 1940, he wrote his book, The Material Basis
of Evolution, in which he exploded point after point in the ammunition box
of the theory. He literally tore it to pieces (Norman Macbeth, Darwin
Retried, 1974, p. 152). No evolutionist could answer him. Like them, he was
a confirmed evolutionary atheist, but he was honestly facing the facts. After
soundly destroying their theory, he announced his new concept: a megaevolution
in which one life-form suddenly emerged completely out of a different one! He
called them "hopeful monsters." One day a fish laid some eggs, and
some of them turned into a frog, a snake laid an egg, and a bird hatched from
it! Goldschmidt asked for even bigger miracles than A.H. Clark had proposed!
(Steven M. Stanley, Macroevolution: Pattern and Process, 1979, p. 159).
American Humanist Association (1933). Humanism is a modern form of
atheism. As soon as it was formed in 1933, the AHA began working closely with
science federations, to promote evolutionary theory, and with the ACLU
(American Civil Liberties Union), to provoke legal action in the courts forcing
Americans to accept their evolutionary beliefs. Signatories included Julian
Huxley (T.H. Huxley’s grandson), John Dewey, Margaret Sanger, H.J. Muller,
Benjamin Spock, Erich Froom, and Carl Rogers (American Humanist Association,
promotional literature).
Trofim Lysenko (1893-1976) rose to power in the 1930s in the USSR by
convincing the government that he could create a State Science that combined
Darwinian evolution theory in science, animal husbandry, and agriculture with
Marxist theory. With Stalin’s hearty backing, Lysenko became responsible for
the death of thousands, including many of Russia’s best scientists. Lysenko
banned Mendelian genetics as a bourgeois heresy. He was ousted in 1965 when his
theories produced agricultural disaster for the nation. (He claimed to be able
to change winter wheat into spring wheat, through temperature change, and wheat
into rye in one generation.)
Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) was chancellor of Nazi Germany from 1933 to
1945. He carefully studied the writings of Darwin and Nietzsche. Hitler’s book,
Mein Kampf, was based on evolutionary theory (Sir Arthur Keith, Evolution
and Ethics, 1947, p. 28). The very title of the book (My Struggle
[to survive and overcome]) was copied from a Darwinian expression. Hitler
believed he was fulfilling evolutionary objectives by eliminating
"undesirable individuals and inferior races" in order to produce
Germany’s "Master Race" (Larry Azar, Twentieth Century in Crisis, 1990,
p. 180). (Notice that the "master race" people always select the race
they are in as the best one.)
Benito Mussolini (1883-1945), the Italian Fascist dictator, was also
captivated by Darwin and Nietzsche; and Neitzsche said he got his ideas from
Darwin (R.E.D. Clark, Darwin: Before and After, 1948, p. 115). Mussolini
believed that violence is basic to social transformation (Encyclopedia
Britannica, 1962, Vol. 16, p. 27).
Coelacanth Discovered (1938). It was once an "index fossil,"
used to date a sedimentary strata. Evolutionists declared it as having been
dead for 70 million years. If their strata theory was correct, no living specimens
could occur, since no coelacanth fossils had been found in the millions of
years of higher strata. But then, on December 25, 1938, a trawler fishing off
South Africa brought up one that was 5 feet in length. More were found later.
Many other discoveries helped disprove the evolutionists’ fossil/strata
theories. Even living creatures like the trilobite have been found!
("Living Fossil Resembles Long-extinct Trilobite," Science Digest,
December 1957).
Hiroshima (1945), is an evolutionist’s paradise; for it is filled with
people heavily irradiated, which--according to evolutionary mutation
theory--should be able to produce children which are new, different, and a more
exalted species. But this has not happened. Only injury and death resulted from
the August 6, 1945, nuclear explosion. Mutations are always harmful and
frequently lethal within a generation or two (Animal Species and Evolution, p.
170, H.J. Muller, Time, November 11, 1946, p. 38).
First Mechanism Changeover (1940s). Darwin originally wrote that random
activity naturally selects itself into improvements (a concept which any
sensible person will say is totally impossible). In a later book (Descent of
Man, 1871), Darwin abandoned "natural selection" as hopeless, and
returned to Lamarckism (the scientifically discredited inheritance of acquired
characteristics; if you build strong muscles, your son will inherit them). But
evolutionists remained faithful to Darwin’s original mechanism (natural
selection) for decades. They were called "Darwinists." But, by the
1940s, many were switching over to mutations as the mechanism of cross-species
change. Its advocates were called "neo-Darwinists." The second
changeover would come in the 1980s.
Radiocarbon dating (1946). Willard Libby and his associates discovered
carbon-14 (C-14) as a method for the dating of earlier organic materials. But
later research revealed that its inaccuracy increases in accordance with the
actual age of the material (C.A. Reed, "Animal Domestication in the
Prehistoric Near East," in Science, 130, 1959, p. 1630; University
of California at Los Angeles, "On the Accuracy of Radiocarbon Dates,"
in Geochronicle, 2, 1966 [Libby’s own laboratory]).
Big Bang Hypothesis (1948) Astronomers were totally buffaloed as to
where matter and stars came from. In desperation, George Gamow and two
associates dreamed up the astonishing concept that an explosion of nothing
produced hydrogen and helium, which then shot outward, then turned and began
circling and pushing itself into our present highly organized stars and
galactic systems. This far-fetched theory has repeatedly been opposed by a
number of scientists (G. Burbidge, "Was There Really a Big Bang?" in Nature
233, 1971, pp. 36, 39). By the 1980s, astronomers which continued opposing
the theory began to be relieved of their research time at major observatories
("Companion Galaxies Match Quasar Redshifts: The Debate Goes On," Physics
Today, 37:17, December 1984). In spite of clear evidence that the theory is
unscientific and unworkable, evolutionists refuse to abandon it.
Steady State Universe Theory (1948). In 1948, Fred Hoyle, working with
Hermann Bondi and Thomas Gold, proposed this theory as an alternative to the
Big Bang. It declared that matter is continually "blipping" into
existence throughout the universe (Peter Pocock and Pat Daniels, Galaxies, p.
114; Fred Hoyle, Frontiers of Astronomy, 1955, pp. 317-318). We will
learn that in 1965, the theory was abandoned. Hoyle said it disagreed with
several scientific facts.
History of
Evolution Part Three
Source: The
Evolution Cruncher