OCR Text |
Show lan the Scientist olution"0 "Well, There Is Evolution Ey VERXON KIKesearch Council. . , r,1tiT7Tamon' biologists. These men, V0LUT10X !S an accepted reahtj won o thm I L thousands of them, trained n a ttcnn.q to study penetratingly the p hmeu. of 1 J t : disinterested search or trut rf phcnomona B-ith the conception of eonit n A h - , extends and grows ,n PM about liviug things the as to quantity and quality. The moic e evolution, more nearly absolute becomes our conviction of the rea y .hat they can learn and tell of the chem, dling of electricity 'f'J breeding and of rtdte LeaT T v ronrnental influence, of glands and hormones, of calo r k "toin And the world accepts gladly and confidently what the scientific men " But wnen fteentific man finds and" declares the reality of evolution evolu-tion bv usin"th same methods by which he finds out these other things, nd b finding tha same kind of proofs on which his declarations . regard-n. regard-n. these things are based, then the world, or a -certain part of it, cries. '5o we do noSt want evolution; we will not have it." What can t e scj-entific scj-entific man do in these circumstances? He can only say: Well, there is evolution." |