Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
twenty thousand years at least. 
. . . The physical evolution of man 
has slowed down almost to a 
standstill. . . . Since the times of 
the Cro-magnon race, probably 
twenty thousand years ago, there 
has been no marked increase in 
man’s cranial capacity, and prob¬ 
ably little or no increase in his 
inherent intellectual ability. . . . 
The only great progress which the 
human race has made during the 
past twenty thousand years has been 
social, and, so far as we can now see 
into the future, the progressive evo¬ 
lution of mankind must depend to 
a great extent on society.” (Lull, 
“Evolution of Man,” pp. 162-64.) 
Pres. J ames Rowland Angell, 
of Yale, in speaking of the evolu¬ 
tion of intelligence, says: “So far 
as we can judge by the evidence in 
historic times, there is no reason 
whatever to suppose that the na- 
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