- Introduction
- Man’s curiosity for the past
- Darwin & natural selection
- Darwin’s theory does not base on logic & reasoning
- Darwin’s theory – challenged by scientists
- Mathematical opposition to theory of evolution
- Opposition due to lack of supporting physical evidence
- Conclusion
Since the drawn humanity, there has been a single question that has perplexed even the greatest of philosophers and scientists. Humans are, by nature, interested in their past. As a result every civilization through out time has sought to find the origin of life, and answered it to meet their needs. Early civilization taught that there was a group of gods located on a far off mountain at the edge of the earth. These gods were responsible for everything, ranging and setting of the sun to a young man winning a fair maidens hand in marriage.
Civilization grew more complex and learned more about the world around them. Soon events that were once looked at as magical or supernatural were explained and proven through logic, mathematical reasoning, and the evidence available. In the early to mid-nineteenth century a scientists named Charles Darwin proposed a theory that broke the away from the common threads of reasoning that looked to a deity or a higher force intervening with humans. ‘Darwin’s proposition was labelled Natural Selection, or more commonly referred to as the survival of the fittest. Darwin proposed that living beings evolve, or change, to meet the needs of the environment around them to allow the species to continue surviving if conditions such as the food source changes. Darwin’s theory was expanded later to a larger scale, to a proclaim that lives has evolved from a hydrogen that was present at the birth of the universe into all living things currently found on Earth.
As with the theories and beliefs of early cultures, Darwin’s Theory of Evolution must meet the same requirements in order to be viewed as plausible and believable. If the theory is logically based, mathematically supported, and there is either evidence promoting the theory, or a lack of evidence contrary to the theory it is accepted as a possible theory that explains life’s origins. However, Darwin’s theory fails to meet any of the regulations placed before it.
Logically the concept of a living organisms emerging from something that is non-living is challenged greatly from the scientific community. A community that insists life must come from life, just as motion must come from motion. Just as a billiard ball is incapable of rolling without a force being applied, a stone is incapable of give-birth to an amoeba. The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that left to it’s own devices, that is without interference by something else, any living being will break down into its simplest form, in direct opposition to the theory of evolution that proposes that living beings will change and gain in complexity over time.