Madness of the Multiverse: A Theory That Only Lives in Comic Books
For a good portion of the 20th century, many academics working in the fields of biology, biochemistry and related disciplines largely accepted the postulate that life on earth evolved slowly after the mysterious origin of some type of living tissue in the primeval past. While no sound scientific thesis has offered an adequate explanation of how abiogenesis (life originating from non-living substances) might have occurred by chance, it has been "accepted on faith," despite evidence to the contrary shown in our video Why Evolution is Wrong. Evolutionists, who deny the reality that the mathematics of probability renders the story of life being a cosmic accident impossible, must strive to conceive a concept that neutralizes the probability problem.
For a good portion of the 20th century, many academics working in the fields of biology, biochemistry and related disciplines largely accepted the postulate that life on earth evolved slowly after the mysterious origin of some type of living tissue in the primeval past. While no sound scientific thesis has offered an adequate explanation of how abiogenesis (life originating from non-living substances) might have occurred by chance, it has been "accepted on faith," despite evidence to the contrary shown in our video Why Evolution is Wrong. Evolutionists, who deny the reality that the mathematics of probability renders the story of life being a cosmic accident impossible, must strive to conceive a concept that neutralizes the probability problem.