The Secret Beyond Matter
Confessions of the Evolutionists
Chapter 11. Evolutionists' Confessions of the Impossibility of a Transition from Water to Dry LandThe evolutionist scenario further maintains that after a time, fish-which had evolved from invertebrates-developed limbs and turned into amphibians capable of living on dry land. But, as you might imagine, there is no evidence for such a scenario. Not a single fossil of a half-fish, half-amphibian creature has ever been found. The process of a transition from water to dry land espoused by evolutionists never happened. In addition to the complete absence of the fossils needed to indicate such a transition, a great many important changes would have had to take place for any living thing to move from water to land. But such a transition is impossible, and many factors make it so. For example, fishes' gills would have to turn into lungs for them to be able to live on land, and their fins would have to strengthen and lengthen into legs. Radical changes would also have to take place in a wide range of internal areas, such as energy consumption and the circulatory and excretory systems. Moreover, all these radical changes would have to take place at once for a creature moving from water to dry land to survive. But it is doubtlessly impossible for such physiological and anatomical changes to take place by chance and simultaneously. And evolutionists are in fact well aware of these impossibilities.
Hoimar Von Ditfurth is a German professor of neurology and psychiatry and a well-known evolutionist science writer:
Robert L. Carroll is the author of Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution:
Edwin H. Colbert is an authority on paleontology and curator at the American Museum of Natural History, and M. Morales is the author of Evolution of the Vertebrates:
From the Encyclopedia Britannica:
Lewis L. Carroll is an evolutionist paleontologist and author of Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution:
Robert L. Carroll is a vertebrate paleontologist and professor of biology at McGill University:
Footnotes227- Hoimar Von Ditfurth, Dinozorlar›n Sessiz Gecesi 2, ["The Silent Night of the Dinosaurs 2"] p. 149. 228- Robert L. Carroll, Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, New York: W. H. Freeman and Co., 1988, p. 4. 229- Robert L. Carroll, "Problems of the Origin of Reptiles," Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Vol. 44, No. 3, July 1969, p. 393. 230- Edwin H. Colbert, M. Morales, Evolution of the Vertebrates, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1991, p. 99. 231- Encyclopaedia Britannica Online, "Turtle" 232- Lewis L. Carroll, "Problems of the Origin of Reptiles," p. 393. 233- Carroll, Robert L., Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, p. 138.
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