18:110 Say [O Prophet]: "I am but a mortal man like all of you. It has been revealed unto me that your God is the One and Only God. Hence, whoever looks forward [with hope and awe] to meeting his Sustainer [on Judgment Day], let him do righteous deeds, and let him not ascribe unto anyone or anything a share in the worship due to his Sustainer!"
Muhammad Asad (The Message Of Quran)
 
Translations TranslationsTranslations












Interface Language:


Chapter/Verse Chapter/VerseChapter/Verse






 
Search in

Find places that contain


Tip You can also enter chapter:verse directly in the search box. e.g. 39:38
 
Printer friendly version Bug report
Google Translate
 
<< Prev 31. Evolution: Divinely Controlled Next >>

Appendix 31
Evolution: Divinely Controlled

We learn from the Quran that evolution is a divinely designed fact:

Life began in water:

"From water, we initiated all living things." [ 21:30, 24:45 ]

Humans are not descendants of monkeys:

"he started the creation of Man from mud." [32:7 ]

Man is created from "aged" mud:

"I'm creating the human being from 'aged' clay." [15:28 ]

Evolution is possible only within a given species. For example, the navel orange evolved from seeded oranges, not from apples. The laws of probablity preclude the possibility of haphazard evolution between species. A fish cannot evolve into a bird; a monkey can never evolve into a human.

Probability Laws Preclude Darwin's Evolution

In this computer age, we have mathematical laws that tell us whether a certain event is probable or not. If we throw five numbered cubes up in the air and let them fall into a guided straight line, the probability laws tell us the number of possible combinations we can get: 1x2x3x4x5=120 combinations. Thus, the probability of obtaining any combination is 1 in 120, or 1/120, or 0.0086. This probability diminishes fast when we increase the number of cubes. If we increase them by one, the number of combinations becomes 1x2x3x4x5x6=720, and the robability of getting any combination diminishes to 1/720, 0.0014. Mathematicians, who are very exacting scientists, have agreed that the probability diminishes to "Zero" when we increase the number of cubes to 84. If we work with 84 cubes, the probability diminishes to 209x10 (raised to the power of) -50, or 0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000209

Darwin's famous statement that "life began as a 'simple' cell" is laughable. As recently as 50 years ago, Wells, Huxley, and Wells wrote in their classic textbook that "nothing can be seen inside the nucleus but clear fluid." We know now that the cell, is an extremely complex unit, with billions of nucleotides in the gene material inside the nucleus, and millions of biochemical reactions. The probability laws tell us that the probability of the haphazard creation of the exacting sequences of nucleotides into DNA is Zero, many times over. We are not talking about 84 nucleotides; we are talking about billions of nucleotides that must be arranged in a specific sequence. Some evolutionists have stated that the human gene and the monkey's gene are 90% similar. However, even if the similarity was 99%, we are still talking about 300,000,000 nucleotides that must be haphazardly re-arranged to change the monkey into a human. The probability laws preclude this as an utter impossibility. The human gene contains 30,000,000,000 nucleotides; 1% of that is 300,000,000. A fitting quote here is that of Professor Edwin Conklin; he stated:

"The probability of life originating from accident is comparable to the probability of the Unabridged Dictionary resulting from an explosion in a printing factory."

<< Prev 31. Evolution: Divinely Controlled Next >>
load.gif

Best viewed using your own brain
Tested on 1024x768 resolution with Firefox 2
Kitabun Marqum v0.6.7 - Kitabun Marqum - Quran Research Platform by QuraniX Team Copyright © 2002-2010 All rights reserved.
Copyrights of all translations belong to their respective authors.

Valid XHTML 1.1 Valid CSS! Level Triple-A conformance icon, 
          W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0