
Origins 12(1):46-47 (1985).
LITERATURE REVIEW
THE GREAT EVOLUTION MYSTERY. Gordon Rattray Taylor. 1983. Harper & Row, New York. 277 pages.
The Great Evolution Mystery is the last of fifteen books
that distinguish Gordon Rattray Taylor as a brilliant writer and an original thinker. His
broad scientific interests and his keen insight into issues of public concern, together
with his literary skills, led to his selection as Chief Science Advisor for BBC
television.
Throughout this book Mr. Taylor expressed unwavering implicit
confidence in naturalistic evolution as the correct view concerning the origin and
development of life. However, the book contains the best collection of scientific evidence
for creation that I have seen! One might suspect that the author was a closet creationist
who posed as an evolutionist to get evolutionists to hear the evidence against their
viewpoint. But as far as I am able to discern, Mr. Taylor was fully honest in his
approach. The vast array of contradictory evidence he has presented is directed only
against the Darwinian and neo-Darwinian explanations for evolution. Having demolished
Darwinism he offers no replacement, other than the confidence that naturalistic evolution
is the only correct general view, and that a satisfactory scientific foundation for it
will be found eventually. He suggests that this foundation may include modified elements
of Lamarckism and an innate property of matter and organisms for self-direction toward
higher complexity and greater adaptability.
I offer some quotations from The Great Evolution Mystery in
hope that they will lead the reader of this review to a thorough reading of the entire
book.
In a summary on page 137, the author refers to "at least a dozen
areas where the theory of evolution by natural selection seems either inadequate,
implausible or definitely wrong."
In reference to "the thirty or more reactions which are involved
in making blood" the author says on page 183: "That these sequences of
coordinated reactions and there are literally thousands of them in the human body
should all have arisen by chance mutation of single genes is in the highest degree
unlikely."
Concerning photosynthesis, he state on page 207, "Unless there was
some inner necessity, some built-in, primordial disposition to consolidate into such a
pattern, it is past belief that anything so intricate and idiosyncratic should
appear."
On page 230 one read, "... perhaps the most serious weakness of
Darwinism is the failure of paleontologists to find convincing phylogenies or sequences of
organisms demonstrating major evolutionary change." Concerning the highly acclaimed
horse evolutionary sequence, Taylor states, "The fact is that the line from Eohippus
[Hyracotherium] to Equus is very erratic.... Specimens from different
sources can be brought together in a convincing-looking sequence, but there is no evidence
that they were actually ranged in this order in time."
On page 233 the author quotes L. von Bertalanffy to state:
"'... the fact that a theory so vague, so insufficiently verifiable ... has become dogma
can only be explained on sociological grounds.'"
The Great Evolution Mystery provides a strong basis for the
conclusion that most people, evolutionists and creationists alike, adopt a theory of
origins first, and then proceed to seek a scientific explanation for it.
All contents copyright
Geoscience Research Institute. All rights reserved.
| Home
| About Us
| Contact Us
|
Send comments and questions to
webmaster@grisda.org
| What's New
| Resources
| Search
| Links
|