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"There
are... seven basic assumptions that are often not mentioned during
discussions of Evolution... These are as follows:
-
The first
assumption is that non‑living things gave rise to living
material, i.e. spontaneous generation occurred.
-
The second assumption is that
spontaneous generation occurred only once. The other
assumptions all follow from the second one.
-
The third
assumption is that viruses, bacteria, plants and animals are all
interrelated.
-
The fourth
assumption is that the Protozoa gave rise to the Metazoa.
-
The fifth
assumption is that the various invertebrate phyla are
interrelated.
-
The sixth
assumption is that the invertebrates gave rise to the
vertebrates.
-
The seventh
assumption is that within the vertebrates the fish gave rise to
the amphibia, the amphibia to the reptiles, and the reptiles to
the birds and mammals. Sometimes this is expressed in other
words, i.e. that the modern amphibia and reptiles had a common
ancestral stock..."
"For
the initial purposes of this discussion on Evolution I shall consider
that the supporters of the theory of Evolution hold that all these seven
assumptions are valid, and that these assumptions form the 'General
Theory of Evolution.'"
"...These
seven assumptions by their nature are not capable of experimental
verification. They assume that a certain series of events has occurred
in the past..."
Gerald A. Kerkut, PhD, Implications of Evolution (New York,
Pergamon Press, 1965) 6, 7. |
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