"I’m genuinely bewildered by people who tout creationism and so forth. It was understandable that Gosse should do so in his book, Omphalos, which was published in 1857, a couple of years before Darwin’s book. Gosse was a very good and passionate naturalist, but also a devout literalist, and this tortured book was his attempt to, as he put it, “untie the geological knot” and reconcile the Bible and the fossil record. But I can’t see how after Darwin, any beliefs like this can be maintained. The sheer, endless beauty and depth of evolutionary theory is far beyond the dullness of a divine Creation."
January 12, 2011
Oliver Sacks on creationists
This is a quote from an interview with Oliver Sacks, the author of "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat".
Labels:
creationism,
Oliver Sacks
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