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Mutant, v. 2, issue 2, May 1948
Page 5
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INWHICH [[?]] DARWIN AND BEN DEVOURED BY A PTERODACTYL Radell Nelson Arm yourself, Ben Singer. I have come to fight for my religion My sword will be logic and my shield, faith. Have that, you! In "The Gullible Herd" you intimate that to be smart is to be an atheist, and all smart people are atheists. Your hero, Charles Darwin, was no atheist. He was, on the contrary, quite a religious man. And his theory of evolution was not a blow to religion. (Quote the ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA, vol. 8, page 488 "Darwin points out that the theory of evolution by natural selection is no more inimical to religion than that of gravitation." Darwin himself said that. I guess that means Darwin can't be on your side anymore, Singer but you won't miss him much. Lately the French scientist, Dr. Lecomet Du Nouy LL.B, PhD, ScD, ect., has found some very embarassing flaws in Darwins theory. Consider the Pterodactyl, the first animal to fly and great great great ect. grandpop of the modern bird. Unpleasant looking monster isn't he? He started out as an ordinary dinosaur, a rather small and sickly one at that. Then, generation by generation, he began to grow wings. They were an awful bother to him. Always underfoot and catching on things, but too small and rudimentary to do him any good. Was he the fittest animal, the one Darwin would bet on to survive? Not him! The tyrannosaurus, 47 feet of solid reptilian might, with teeth three to six inches long, was the fittest of dinosaurs, almost by default. ((To big, Mr. Nelson. wng)) He probably devoured dozens of helpless, clumsy pterodactyls every day. The tyrannosaurus died off, without a predecessor, but the peterodactyl took to the wild blue, and fathered the race of our modern birds. this is a case of survival of the unfittest. Nature herself has the last laught on Darwin. But why did the poor stupid pterodactyl go thru all the trouble and danger of growing wings? He could not have predicted that they would be useful in time, for he, like some people I know, flaps of skin.... for generations? Some power, some plan, compelled him to develop. Some wise and wonderful power. Aw, let's come right out and say it. IT WAS GOD EDITORS! WRITERS! TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT BUREAU SEND YOUR MANUSCRIPTS TO THE MANUSCRIPT BUREAU OF THE N3F Get YOUR mms into a variety of fanzines CONTACT A-T RAPP 2120 BAY STREET SAGINAW MICH -5-
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INWHICH [[?]] DARWIN AND BEN DEVOURED BY A PTERODACTYL Radell Nelson Arm yourself, Ben Singer. I have come to fight for my religion My sword will be logic and my shield, faith. Have that, you! In "The Gullible Herd" you intimate that to be smart is to be an atheist, and all smart people are atheists. Your hero, Charles Darwin, was no atheist. He was, on the contrary, quite a religious man. And his theory of evolution was not a blow to religion. (Quote the ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA, vol. 8, page 488 "Darwin points out that the theory of evolution by natural selection is no more inimical to religion than that of gravitation." Darwin himself said that. I guess that means Darwin can't be on your side anymore, Singer but you won't miss him much. Lately the French scientist, Dr. Lecomet Du Nouy LL.B, PhD, ScD, ect., has found some very embarassing flaws in Darwins theory. Consider the Pterodactyl, the first animal to fly and great great great ect. grandpop of the modern bird. Unpleasant looking monster isn't he? He started out as an ordinary dinosaur, a rather small and sickly one at that. Then, generation by generation, he began to grow wings. They were an awful bother to him. Always underfoot and catching on things, but too small and rudimentary to do him any good. Was he the fittest animal, the one Darwin would bet on to survive? Not him! The tyrannosaurus, 47 feet of solid reptilian might, with teeth three to six inches long, was the fittest of dinosaurs, almost by default. ((To big, Mr. Nelson. wng)) He probably devoured dozens of helpless, clumsy pterodactyls every day. The tyrannosaurus died off, without a predecessor, but the peterodactyl took to the wild blue, and fathered the race of our modern birds. this is a case of survival of the unfittest. Nature herself has the last laught on Darwin. But why did the poor stupid pterodactyl go thru all the trouble and danger of growing wings? He could not have predicted that they would be useful in time, for he, like some people I know, flaps of skin.... for generations? Some power, some plan, compelled him to develop. Some wise and wonderful power. Aw, let's come right out and say it. IT WAS GOD EDITORS! WRITERS! TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE MANUSCRIPT BUREAU SEND YOUR MANUSCRIPTS TO THE MANUSCRIPT BUREAU OF THE N3F Get YOUR mms into a variety of fanzines CONTACT A-T RAPP 2120 BAY STREET SAGINAW MICH -5-
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