IMAGINARY MECHANISMS OF EVOLUTION
Mutations
Mutations are defined as breaks or replacements taking place in
the DNA molecule, which is found in the nuclei of the cells of a
living organism and which contains all its genetic information.
These breaks or replacements are the result of external effects
such as radiation or chemical action. Every mutation is an "accident"
and either damages the nucleotides making up the DNA or changes
their locations. Most of the time, they cause so much damage and
modification that the cell cannot repair them.
Mutation, which evolutionists frequently hide behind, is not a
magic wand that transforms living organisms into a more advanced
and perfect form. The direct effect of mutations is harmful. The
changes effected by mutations can only be like those experienced
by people in Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Chernobyl: that is, death,
disability, and sickness…
The reason for this is very simple: DNA has a very complex structure,
and random effects can only damage the organism. B.G. Ranganathan
states:
First, genuine mutations
are very rare in nature. Secondly, most mutations are harmful
since they are random, rather than orderly changes in the structure
of genes; any random change in a highly ordered system will be
for the worse, not for the better. For example, if an earthquake
were to shake a highly ordered structure such as a building, there
would not be a random change in the framework of the building
which, in all probability, would not be an improvement.19
Not surprisingly, no useful mutation has been so far observed.
All mutations have proved to be harmful. The evolutionist scientist
Warren Weaver comments on the report prepared by the Committee on
Genetic Effects of Atomic Radiation, which had been formed to investigate
mutations that might have been caused by the nuclear weapons used
in the Second World War:
Many will be puzzled about
the statement that practically all known mutant genes are harmful.
For mutations are a necessary part of the process of evolution.
How can a good effect - evolution to higher forms of life - results
from mutations practically all of which are harmful? 20
Every effort put into "generating a useful mutation" has resulted
in failure. For decades, evolutionists carried out many experiments
to produce mutations in fruit flies as these insects reproduce very
rapidly and so mutations would show up quickly. Generation upon
generation of these flies were mutated, yet no useful mutation was
ever observed. The evolutionist geneticist Gordon Taylor writes
thus:
It is a striking, but not
much mentioned fact that, though geneticists have been breeding
fruit-flies for sixty years or more in labs all around the world-flies
which produce a new generation every eleven days-they have never
yet seen the emergence of a new species or even a new enzyme.21
Another researcher, Michael Pitman, comments on the failure of
the experiments carried out on fruit flies:
Morgan, Goldschmidt, Muller,
and other geneticists have subjected generations of fruit flies
to extreme conditions of heat, cold, light, dark, and treatment
by chemicals and radiation. All sorts of mutations, practically
all trivial or positively deleterious, have been produced. Man-made
evolution? Not really: Few of the geneticists' monsters could
have survived outside the bottles they were bred in. In practice
mutants die, are sterile, or tend to revert to the wild type.
22
ALL MUTATIONS ARE HARMFUL
 
Left: A normal
fruit fly (drosophila).
Middle: A fruit fly with its legs jutting from its head; a
mutation induced by radiation.
Right: A disastrous effect of mutations on the human body.
The boy is a Chernobyl nuclear plant accident victim.
|
The same holds true for man. All mutations that have been observed
in human beings have had deleterious results. On this issue, evolutionists
throw up a smokescreen and try to enlist examples of even such deleterious
mutations as "evidence for evolution". All mutations that take place
in humans result in physical deformities, in infirmities such as
mongolism, Down syndrome, albinism, dwarfism or cancer. These mutations
are presented in evolutionist textbooks as examples of "the evolutionary
mechanism at work". Needless to say, a process that leaves people
disabled or sick cannot be "an evolutionary mechanism"-evolution
is supposed to produce forms that are better fitted to survive.
To summarise, there are three main reasons why mutations cannot
be pressed into the service of supporting evolutionists' assertions:
l) The direct effect of mutations is harmful:
Since they occur randomly, they almost always damage the living
organism that undergoes them. Reason tells us that unconscious
intervention in a perfect and complex structure will not improve
that structure, but will rather impair it. Indeed, no "useful
mutation" has ever been observed.
2) Mutations add no new information to an organism's
DNA: As a result of mutations, the particles making
up the genetic information are either torn from their places,
destroyed, or carried off to different places. Mutations cannot
make a living thing acquire a new organ or a new trait. They
only cause abnormalities like a leg sticking out of the back,
or an ear from the abdomen.
3) In order for a mutation to be transferred to the
subsequent generation, it has to have taken place in the reproductive
cells of the organism: A random change that occurs
in a cell or organ of the body cannot be transferred to the
next generation. For example, a human eye altered by the effects
of radiation or by other causes will not be passed on to subsequent
generations.
It is impossible for living beings to have evolved, because there
exists no mechanism in nature that can cause evolution. Furthermore,
this conclusion agrees with the evidence of the fossil record,
which does not demonstrate the existence of a process of evolution,
but rather just the contrary.
  
19
B. G. Ranganathan, Origins?, Pennsylvania: The Banner Of Truth Trust,
1988.
20 Warren Weaver, "Genetic Effects of Atomic Radiation",
Science, Vol 123, June 29, 1956, p. 1159.
21 Gordon R. Taylor, The Great Evolution Mystery,
New York: Harper & Row, 1983, p. 48.
22 Michael Pitman, Adam and Evolution, London:
River Publishing, 1984, p. 70. |