OBJECTIONS TO THEORY, ETC. 141 



may well assume that the body is also a special crea- 

 tion. 



Sec. 50. Objection to this Theory of Special 



Creation 



I admit that there are serious objections to my 

 theory of special creation. But like objections may 

 be brought against any other theory. For example, 

 many serious objections have been brought against 

 Darwin's theory of organic evolution. Yet a majority 

 of all the scientists believe it is true. 



In his "Man's Place in Nature" (p. 149), Huxley 

 says: 



"Our acceptance of the Darwinian hypothesis 

 must be provisional so long as one link in the chain of 

 evidence is wanting; and so long as all animals and 

 plants certainly produced by selective breeding from 

 a common stock are fertile, and their pogeny are fer- 

 tile with one another, that link will be wanting. ' 



This link is still missing and probably will be 

 forever. 



Although there are serious objections to my the- 

 ory? yet there is none so serious as there are to the 

 alternative theory that dead atoms and blind, unthink- 

 ing cells do spontaneously and automatically group 

 themselves into the chemical combinations and me- 

 chanical arrangements, which are necessary to produce 

 the human body; and that this body becomes, spon- 

 taneously and automatically, a live human being with 

 intellect, memory and will. 



