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Distinguishing
Between Science and Materialism
The information we have
considered throughout this book has shown us
that the theory of evolution has no scientific
basis, and that, on the contrary, evolutionist
claims conflict with scientific facts. In other
words, the force that keeps evolution alive is
not science. Evolution may be maintained by some
"scientists," but behind it there is another
influence at work.
This other influence is
materialist philosophy. The theory of evolution
is simply materialist philosophy applied to
nature, and those who support that philosophy do
so despite the scientific evidence.
This relationship
between materialism and the theory of evolution
is accepted by "authorities" on these concepts.
For example, the discovery of Darwin was
described by Leon Trotsky as "the highest
triumph of the dialectic in the whole field of
organic matter."388
The evolutionary
biologist Douglas Futuyma writes, "Together with
Marx's materialist theory of history and
society…. Darwin hewed the final planks of the
platform of mechanism and materialism."389
And the evolutionary paleontologist Stephen Jay
Gould says, "Darwin applied a consistent
philosophy of materialism to his interpretation
of nature."390

Karl Marx
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Materialist philosophy
is one of the oldest beliefs in the world, and
assumes the absolute and exclusive existence of
matter as its basic principle. According to this
view, matter has always existed, and everything
that exists consists of matter. This makes
belief in a Creator impossible, of course,
because if matter has always existed, and if
everything consists of matter, then there can be
no supramaterial Creator who created it.
So the question becomes
one of whether the materialist point of view is
correct. One method of testing whether a
philosophy is true or false is to investigate
the claims it makes about science by using
scientific methods. For instance, a philosopher
in the tenth century could have claimed that
there was a divine tree on the surface of the
moon and that all living things actually grew on
the branches of this huge tree like fruit, and
then fell off onto the earth. Some people might
have found this philosophy attractive and
believed in it. But in the twenty first century,
at a time when man has managed to walk on the
moon, it is no longer possible to seriously hold
such a belief. Whether such a tree exists there
or not can be determined by scientific methods,
that is, by observation and experiment.
We can therefore
investigate by means of scientific methods the
materialist claim that matter has existed for
all eternity and that this matter can organize
itself without a supramaterial Creator and cause
life to begin. When we do this, we see that
materialism has already collapsed, because the
idea that matter has existed since the beginning
of time has been overthrown by the Big Bang
theory which shows that the universe was created
from nothingness. The claim that matter
organized itself and created life is the claim
that we call the theory of evolution-which this
book has been examining-and which has been shown
to have collapsed.
However, if someone is
determined to believe in materialism and puts
his devotion to materialist philosophy before
everything else, then he will act differently.
If he is a materialist first and a scientist
second, he will not abandon materialism when he
sees that evolution is disproved by science. On
the contrary, he will attempt to uphold and
defend materialism by trying to support
evolution, no matter what. This is exactly the
predicament that evolutionists defending the
theory of evolution find themselves in today.
Interestingly enough,
they also confess this fact from time to time. A
well-known geneticist and outspoken
evolutionist, Richard C. Lewontin from Harvard
University, confesses that he is "a materialist
first and a scientist second" in these words:
It is not that the
methods and institutions of science somehow
compel us accept a material explanation of the
phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we
are forced by our a priori adherence to material
causes to create an apparatus of investigation
and a set of concepts that produce material
explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive,
no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated.
Moreover, that materialism is absolute, so we
cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door.391
The term "a priori" that
Lewontin uses here is quite important. This
philosophical term refers to a presupposition
not based on any experimental knowledge. A
thought is "a priori" when you consider it to be
correct and accept it as so even if there is no
information available to confirm it. As the
evolutionist Lewontin frankly states,
materialism is an "a priori" commitment for
evolutionists, who then try to adapt science to
this preconception. Since materialism definitely
necessitates denying the existence of a Creator,
they embrace the only alternative they have to
hand, which is the theory of evolution. It does
not matter to such scientists that evolution has
been belied by scientific facts, because they
have accepted it "a priori" as true.
This prejudiced behavior
leads evolutionists to a belief that
"unconscious matter composed itself," which is
contrary not only to science, but also to
reason. The concept of "the self-organization of
matter," which we examined in an earlier
chapter, is an expression of this.
Evolutionist propaganda,
which we constantly come across in the Western
media and in well-known and "esteemed" science
magazines, is the outcome of this ideological
necessity. Since evolution is considered to be
indispensable, it has been turned into a sacred
cow by the circles that set the standards of
science.
Some scientists find
themselves in a position where they are forced
to defend this far-fetched theory, or at least
avoid uttering any word against it, in order to
maintain their reputations. Academics in Western
countries have to have articles published in
certain scientific journals in order to attain
and hold onto their professorships. All of the
journals dealing with biology are under the
control of evolutionists, and they do not allow
any anti-evolutionist article to appear in them.
Biologists, therefore, have to conduct their
research under the domination of this theory.
They, too, are part of the established order,
which regards evolution as an ideological
necessity, which is why they blindly defend all
the "impossible coincidences" we have been
examining in this book.
The Definition of
the "Scientific Cause"
The German biologist
Hoimar von Ditfurth, a prominent evolutionist,
is a good example of this bigoted materialist
understanding. After Ditfurth cites an example
of the extremely complex composition of life,
this is what he says concerning the question of
whether it could have emerged by chance or not:
Is such a harmony that
emerged only out of coincidences possible in
reality? This is the basic question of the whole
of biological evolution. ...Critically speaking,
we can say that somebody who accepts the modern
science of nature has no other alternative than
to say "yes," because he aims to explain natural
phenomena by means that are understandable and
tries to derive them from the laws of nature
without reverting to supernatural interference.392
Yes, as Ditfurth states,
the materialist scientific approach adopts as
its basic principle explaining life by denying
"supernatural interference," i.e., creation.
Once this principle is adopted, even the most
impossible scenarios are easily accepted. It is
possible to find examples of this dogmatic
mentality in almost all evolutionist literature.
Professor Ali Demirsoy, the well-known advocate
of evolutionary theory in Turkey, is just one of
many. As we have already pointed out, according
to Demirsoy, the probability of the coincidental
formation of cytochrome-C, an essential protein
for life, is "as unlikely as the possibility of
a monkey writing the history of humanity on a
typewriter without making any mistakes."393
There is no doubt that
to accept such a possibility is actually to
reject the basic principles of reason and common
sense. Even one single correctly formed letter
written on a page makes it certain that it was
written by a person. When one sees a book of
world history, it becomes even more certain that
the book has been written by an author. No
logical person would agree that the letters in
such a huge book could have been put together
"by chance."
However, it is very
interesting to see that the evolutionist
scientist Professor Ali Demirsoy accepts this
sort of irrational proposition:
In essence, the
probability of the formation of a cytochrome-C
sequence is as likely as zero. That is, if life
requires a certain sequence, it can be said that
this has a probability likely to be realized
once in the whole universe. Otherwise some
metaphysical powers beyond our definition must
have acted in its formation. To accept the
latter is not appropriate for the scientific
cause. We thus have to look into the first
hypothesis.394
Demirsoy writes that he
prefers the impossible, in order not to have to
accept supernatural forces-in other words, the
existence of a Creator. However, the aim of
science is not to avoid accepting the existence
of supernatural forces. Science can get nowhere
with such an aim. It should simply observe
nature, free of all prejudices, and draw
conclusions from these observations. If these
results indicate that there is planning by a
supernatural intelligence, then science must
accept the fact.
Under close examination,
what they call the "scientific cause" is
actually the materialist dogma that only matter
exists and that all of nature can be explained
by material processes. This is not a "scientific
cause," or anything like it; it is just
materialist philosophy. This philosophy hides
behind such superficial words as "scientific
cause" and obliges scientists to accept quite
unscientific conclusions. Not surprisingly, when
Demirsoy cites another subject-the origins of
the mitochondria in the cell-he openly accepts
chance as an explanation, even though it is
"quite contrary to scientific thought":
The heart of the problem
is how the mitochondria have acquired this
feature, because attaining this feature by
chance even by one individual, requires extreme
probabilities that are incomprehensible... The
enzymes providing respiration and functioning as
a catalyst in each step in a different form make
up the core of the mechanism. A cell has to
contain this enzyme sequence completely,
otherwise it is meaningless. Here, despite being
contrary to biological thought, in order to
avoid a more dogmatic explanation or
speculation, we have to accept, though
reluctantly, that all the respiration enzymes
completely existed in the cell before the cell
first came in contact with oxygen.395
The conclusion to be
drawn from such pronouncements is that evolution
is not a theory arrived at through scientific
investigation. On the contrary, the form and
substance of this theory were dictated by the
requirements of materialistic philosophy. It
then turned into a belief or dogma in spite of
concrete scientific facts. Again, we can clearly
see from evolutionist literature that all of
this effort has a "purpose"-and that purpose
precludes any belief that living things were not
created, no matter what the price.
Coming to Terms
with the Shocks
As we recently stressed,
materialism is the belief that categorically
rejects the existence of the nonmaterial (or the
"supernatural"). Science, on the other hand, is
under no obligation to accept such a dogma. The
duty of science is to observe nature and produce
results. If these reveal that nature was
created, science has to accept the fact.
And science does reveal
the fact that living things were created. This
is something demonstrated by scientific
discoveries, which we may call "design." When we
examine the fantastically complex structures in
living things, we see that they possess such
extraordinary design features that they can
never be accounted for by natural processes and
coincidences. Every instance of design is
evidence for an intelligence; therefore, we must
conclude that life, too, was designed by an
intelligence. Since this intelligence is not
present in matter, it must belong to a
nonmaterial wisdom-a superior wisdom, an
infinite power, that rules all of nature… In
short, life and all living things were created.
This is not a dogmatic belief like materialism,
but the result of scientific observation and
experiment.
We see that this
conclusion comes as a terrible shock for
scientists who are used to believing in
materialism, and that materialism is a science.
See how this shock is described by Michael Behe,
one of the most important scientists to stand
against the theory of evolution in the world
today:
The resulting
realization that life was designed by an
intelligence is a shock to us in the twentieth
century who have gotten used to thinking of life
as the result of simple natural laws. But other
centuries have had their shocks, and there is no
reason to suppose that we should escape them.396
Mankind has been freed
from such dogmas as that the world is flat, or
that it is the center of the universe. And it is
now being freed from the materialist and
evolutionist dogma that life came about by
itself.
The duty that befalls a
true scientist in this respect, is to do away
with materialist dogma and evaluate the origin
of life and living things with the honesty and
objectivity befitting a real scientist. A real
scientist must come to terms with the "shock,"
and not tie himself to outdated
nineteenth-century dogmas and defend impossible
scenarios.
Continue:
Conclusion
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