Have you ever watched a television program about nature and wondered? Why should the presenter be so sure of the accuracy of what is being shown? Yet, it is impossible to imagine how something can be true.
Charles Darwin wrote a very distinguished book on the subject of “The Origin of Species.” But in that seemingly learned tome, which has been taken up by others and treated as absolute truth for years, he says: “The theory of natural selection seems to me to be in itself PROBABLE.” Those “probabilities” have, in about one and a half centuries, come to be regarded as “Gospel Truth.”
Given such probabilities, today’s naturalists put forward their programs without warning that there may be problems with their theories. They add another few million years to their estimates of tremendous and unbelievable happenings to fool a gullible and amazed audience into believing “unbelievable facts.” This book probes below the surface of some of those “facts.” It asks, for instance, how one poor, shivering monkey crawled out of the primeval slime and then survived for long enough in a highly hostile environment to change itself into two monkeys instead of one poor individual.