Mark My Words 2.2

You have stumbled across the microblog of Mark Hawker, an informatics researcher by day and a social application developer by night. I am also the author of The Developer's Guide to Social Programming.

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Have you been deceived by Darwinists? The book, “On The Origin Of Species”, was first published in 1859 this is, indeed, a great book. It is well-written and humble. However, despite what you’ve been told, this book only contains the word “evolution” once (as its final word) and makes none of the great leaps depicted in this hardcover version published in 1999. He does, however, suggest that all species come from a single progenitor. (This creature, interestingly, is described as being “created”.) Darwin alludes to oppositions to a Creator (in most respects on a scientific level as it adds nothing to the ongoing conversation), actually “independent acts of creation”, in a few places in the book but does also provide limitations to his own theories of natural selection such as the lack of evidence of intermediate forms of species in geological records. There is no doubt that Darwin does generate some interesting discussion that can be argued from both sides. This is definitely worth a read and, in particular, useful for Christians to begin to understand what Darwin actually said rather than it coming second-hand from others who maybe have not read this book.

Have you been deceived by Darwinists? The book, “On The Origin Of Species”, was first published in 1859 this is, indeed, a great book. It is well-written and humble. However, despite what you’ve been told, this book only contains the word “evolution” once (as its final word) and makes none of the great leaps depicted in this hardcover version published in 1999. He does, however, suggest that all species come from a single progenitor. (This creature, interestingly, is described as being “created”.) Darwin alludes to oppositions to a Creator (in most respects on a scientific level as it adds nothing to the ongoing conversation), actually “independent acts of creation”, in a few places in the book but does also provide limitations to his own theories of natural selection such as the lack of evidence of intermediate forms of species in geological records. There is no doubt that Darwin does generate some interesting discussion that can be argued from both sides. This is definitely worth a read and, in particular, useful for Christians to begin to understand what Darwin actually said rather than it coming second-hand from others who maybe have not read this book.

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