What flying fish tell us about evolution by Lawrence Auster
One of the most telling pieces of evidence against the Darwinian theory of evolution by random mutation and natural selection is the existence of highly specialized analogous organs in unrelated species. Wings, for example, have evolved on at least three occasions--in winged insects, in winged mammals, namely the bat, and in winged dinosaurs/birds. (I'm assuming for the sake of discussion that birds are related to flying reptiles, so I'm treating them here as one group.) Insects, bats, and reptiles/birds have no immediate relationship with each other, which means that in each instance, the organs and faculty of winged flight came into existence independently.
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