Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
stract reasoning, his appreciation 
of the beauties of nature, his enjoy¬ 
ment of music, his moral sense, 
conscience, his dominion over the 
rest of creation, his religious faith, 
his belief in Grod? Even Lull ad¬ 
mits: “The intelligence of man so 
far surpasses that of his nearest 
competitors, the anthropoids, that 
the mental gulf between them is 
immeasurable.” (Lull, “Evolu¬ 
tion of Man,” p. 38.) 
Wallace frankly concedes that 
this is a gulf which evolution can 
not bridge. He says: “We find the 
most pronounced distinction be¬ 
tween man and the anthropoid apes 
in the size and complexity of his 
brain.” He then quotes Huxley’s 
words: “It may be doubted whether 
a healthy human adult brain ever 
weighed less than thirty-one or 
thirty-two ounces, or that the 
heaviest gorilla brain has exceeded 
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