This is what I've been saying ... Darwinism is like a religion...
Darwinists don't even seem to know who Linnaeus was, "Linnaeus who? never heard of him". Obviously they have a very limited working knowledge of science in general. Therefore how could such people, with such limited understanding, possibly grasp anything so complex about the origins and proliferation of species around the planet?
~ swarthmore edu“Although Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution laid the foundations of modern biology, it did not tell the whole story. Most remarkably, The Origin of Species said very little about, of all things, the origins of species. Darwin and his modern successors have shown very convincingly how inherited variations are naturally selected, but they leave unanswered how variant organisms come to be in the first place."
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"...Darwin and his modern successors have shown very convincingly how inherited variations are naturally selected,"I haven't seen that overwhelming evidence for this claim. A few examples, not more.
I suppose if you go looking hard enough, you can find a handful of examples to support a theory about anything... but that doesn't necessarily make it so.
And I agree...
"they leave unanswered how variant organisms come to be in the first place."
Because Darwin couldn't. He couldn't appropriately explain the absence of fossils before the Cambrian explosion, much less, the billions of years the earth had appeared to lay dormant. That huge gap, is a real problem for "Natural Selection." 3.5 billion years of bacteria baking under the sun, and it just sits there, with no mutations toward the production of hard-body plans and complex organisms. The high Co2 levels in Earth's early history would've been ideally suited for plants -- thus, followed by animals, billions of years before... but it didn't happen that way.
"...“Although Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution laid the foundations of modern biology..."Really?
Exhibit dedicated to Carolus Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist whose work laid the foundations of modern biological systematics and ...
~ yahoo
Before Linnaeus weighed in, the living world had seemed a hodge-podge of organisms. ... and animals and laid the foundation for much of the work in biology that ...
~ books nap edu
Carl Linnaeus was a Sweden botanist, physician, and zoologist, who laid the foundations for the modern scheme of binomial nomenclature. ... In Biology taxonomy, a domain is the highest taxonomic rank of organisms, higher than a Kingdom . ... As an example, consider the Linnaean classification for modern human ...
~ absoluteastronomy com
... Linnaeus laid the foundations of modern biology. He was certainly proud of his achievements. 'God creates, Linnaeus organises,' he liked to say;
~ nick-lane net
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