Darwinism

Darwinism is not a scientific theory, but monomania, a fixed idea into which reality can only be squeezed in by force, at the cost of irresolvable contradictions and distortion of data. Any innovation in the history of the earth—for example, the appearance of an external skeleton in crustaceans, a backbone in vertebrates, the first flowering plants, an eye with a lens, horns, or bird feathers—according to Darwinism, could occur at any time, but always only at a certain time. environment as a result of adaptation for survival. In reality, they occur in different environments (on land, in the air and under water), but only at a certain time. They appear simultaneously in a number of species that do not interbreed.
Moreover, the sequence of these evolutionary innovations in time is the same as in history! The same creature that inspired the creation of the roses of Gothic cathedrals already in the Mesozoic created flowers, butterflies and a peacock's tail. Architects build obelisks and colonnades under the influence of the same being who gave us the vertical spine and plants the stem. In the 14th century, aesthetic forms sharpened all over the world, because the spirit of the end of the Mesozoic returned, in which all living things received horns. And the creatures that once created shells again made themselves felt in the Baroque with their love for pearl and shell-shaped decorations.

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