Sec. 9. Human Body is Constructed on a 

 Definite and Specific Plan 



Every bone, joint, process, muscle, nerve, artery, 

 vein and part has its own chemical composition, form, 

 size, structure and position in the body. Each nor- 

 mal human body has the same tissues, organs and 

 parts, that every other such body has ; the form, 

 structure, organs and parts of all normal bodies be- 

 ing identically the same. 



If the so-called factors of evolution were at work 

 in every age and in every part of the earth, as main- 

 tained by the evolutionist, we would surely find vari- 

 ations and diversities in the form and structure of the 

 bodies of men in different ages and countries; for we 

 know that the environments of the different varieties 

 of man differ very greatly in time and space. For 

 example, the eskimos live all their lives in the frozen 

 regions at the North, while the inhabitants of the 

 tropics spend their lives under a blazing sun; yet 

 there is no anatomical difference between the body of 

 an Eskimo and that of a Cuban. 



What is the inference to be drawn from these 

 facts? The evolutionist and the naturalist say that 

 the facts imply that all men have descended from a 

 common ancestor, that each individual inherits, from 

 his parents, every organ and part of his body, that 

 "like begets like.' They maintain that the law of 

 heredity has produced the uniformity of size, form, 

 features, organs and parts, which we discover among 



