Some Good Books Challenging Evolution
Behe, Michael J., Darwin's Black Box. The Free Press, New
York, 1996. This dynamite book, by a
non-creationist biochemist who is Associate Professor of Biochemistry at Lehigh
University in Bethlehem, PA., is a fundamental challenge to the fundamental
principals of Darwinism. Because of
the knowledge gained in the 20th century by the invention of the electron
microscope and the discovery of DNA, the secrets of the cell were unlocked, and
science was plunged into a world of incredible complexity and organization that
former generations could not have dreamed of.
The cilium alone has more than 200 protein machines that must work
together in the finest balance for even this tiny hair-like part to fulfil its
function. Evolutionists will pooh-pooh
this book, but facts are stubborn things.
Johnson, Phillip. Darwin
on Trial. Regnery Gateway,
Washington. 1991. This book by Univ. of
Calif. at Berkeley law professor. This
book shook the world of scholarship, for something like this should not have
come out of a liberal bastion like Berkeley.
Prof. Johnson simply subjected evolution to the rules of evidence that
would be required in any court of justice, and found the evidence sadly
wanting. Dr. Johnson is a graduate of
Harvard and the University of Chicago.
Chapter Ten is great:
"Darwinist Religion" which explodes the pretense of
neutrality. Dr. Johnson does not
endorse creationism, but it is a great first book.
Johnson, Phillip. Reason
in the Balance. InterVarsity Press,
Downers Grove, Illinois. 1995 Prof.
Johnson's second book moves closer to creationism. This book shows the evolutionist is willing to sacrifice reason itself
on the altar of his religious beliefs.
Truth is sacrificed for pragmatism.
It is not important whether something is true, for truth is an
abstraction that cannot be determined for sure. All we can expect is "Does it work?" Get this book if you are serious about this
subject and want to know. Evolutionary
dogmatists won't read it.
Morris, Henry M. The
Long War Against God. Baker Books,
1989 P. O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 49516-6287. The great value of this book is the
documented bias and close-mindedness of those within the evolutionary school of
thought. Morris documents the racism of
early evolutionists, the political agenda of evolutionists, and the impact on
morals and religion. Well worth
reading.