Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
such an organ as the eye through 
incredibly slow changes we should 
not forget that the Cephalopods 
found in the Primordial, in the very 
first fossil remains, supposedly 
thirty to fifty million years old, 
had fully developed eyes approach¬ 
ing in complexity the eyes of man. 
One can not forbear wondering how 
many billions of years would have 
been required for the gradual 
development of the eye prior to 
that time. That this is a serious 
difficulty is evident from the fact 
that Darwin said: “If it could be 
demonstrated that any complex 
organ existed, which could not pos¬ 
sibly have been formed by numer¬ 
ous, successive, slight modifications, 
my theory would absolutely break 
down.” (“Origin of Species,” p. 
174.) 
6. And how shall we account for 
the instinct of the honey-bees 
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