CREATION BY EVOLUTION 



Kappers, C. V. Ariens. Cerebral Localization and the Significance 

 of Sulci, Report of the XVIIth International Congress of Medi- 

 cine, 1913, Oxford University Press. 



In all three works, and especially No. 3, further bibliographical 

 references will be found. 



Lyell, in a letter to John Hershel, in 1830, wrote: "When I first came 

 to the notion ... of a succession of extinction of species, and the creation 

 of new ones, going on perpetually now, and through an indefinite period in 

 the past, and to continue for ages to come, all in accommodation to the 

 changes which must continue in the inanimate and habitable earth, the idea 

 struck me as the grandest which I had ever conceived, so far as regards 

 the attributes of the Presiding Mind." 



"It is plain that neither in "systematic theology' nor in science has the 

 last word been said. In astronomy, in physics, in life, in space, in time, 

 in thought, we find ourselves baffled in the face of Infinity. The Master 

 Key that shall unlock all doors which open toward the center, no man has 

 yet found. It too must lie within the gates of Infinity!" — David S. Jordan. 



"Organic evolution states most emphatically that species are not fixed 

 and unchangeable, and were not created in one sudden stroke, but that they 

 have varied considerably and that the forms now existing have slowly 

 developed from more primitive ancestors." — Joseph Meyer. 



"To understand what has happened, and even what will happen we have 

 only to examine what is happening." — BuflFon. 



Evolutionists, Darwin included, do not say that man is descended from any 

 existing kind of ape or monkey, but that pro-man and ape, in the dim and 

 distant past, had a common ancestor, now extinct, that was neither man nor 

 ape. — Editor. 



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