Internet-Veröffentlichung internet publication 2009
Ed Dellian
35. Isaac Newton „On the Origin of Species (1713)"
Isaac Newton's "Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica" of 1687 teaches the origination of "mutations" of motion by active "forces of nature". In the second edition (1713) of the "Principia" Newton's editor Roger Cotes (in an "editor's preface") and Newton himself (in a "Scholium generale") embedded the theory in the much broader context of creation of the new, ultimately referring to the Creator.
Newton's dualist theory of origination of motion is at variance with the evolutionists belief in the activity and omnipotency of matter as a corner-stone of their hypothetical-deductive theory of the origin of species. In short: If Newton was right, Darwin was wrong.
[Den vollständigen Text finden Sie im PDF-Download.]PDF öffnen