he BBC’s evolution quiz involved seven questions that had to be answered true or false. So, let’s take the quiz and test the BBC’s understanding of evolution.
The BBC recently put a ‘Quiz: Test your knowledge of evolution’1 on their website. The reason for the quiz is that, even though evolution is seen as a well-accepted scientific principle in the UK, the BBC believes there are still many misconceptions about it amongst people:
The quiz involved seven questions that had to be answered true or false. So, let’s take the quiz and test the BBC’s understanding of evolution.
1. Humans are still evolving. True or false?
There are two things wrong with the question and answer. The first thing that needs to be recognized is that it commits the fallacy of “begging the question.” This happens when a person simply assumes what he is attempting to prove, or when the premise of an argument depends upon its conclusion. Although the BBC believes human evolution is seen as a well-established fact, the question that we should ask is: Did humans evolve? The answer of course would be: false as there is not a single piece of evidence that is consistent with humans having evolved from ape-like creatures (see Did Humans Really Evolve from Ape-Like Creatures). The evidence from Scripture and the sequencing of the human genome are consistent with all humans sharing ancestry with one pair of human parents, Adam and Eve. Secondly, the answer to the question equivocates on the term evolution, which is common in evolutionary arguments. The word evolution is often used by evolutionists to refer to descent from a common ancestor. Yet, evolution also refers to change in a generic sense. Even though both definitions are accurate they should not be confused in an argument. The evolutionist is basically arguing: “I know evolution is true (we evolved from a common ancestor) because we see evolution (change within human characteristics) happening all the time.” The fact that human characteristics are changing does not mean we share a common ancestor with ape-like creatures.
THERE IS NOT A SINGLE PIECE OF EVIDENCE THAT IS CONSISTENT WITH HUMANS HAVING EVOLVED FROM APE-LIKE CREATURES
2. Evolution can only happen slowly, over long periods of time. True or false?
Antibiotic resistance of bacteria is often used by evolutionists as an argument for evolution in action. However, this is the opposite of evolution and is just another example of natural selection working in conjunction with mutations. The bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics through mutation involves a loss of genetic information, which is the opposite of evolution.2
3. The giraffe's long neck is an example of evolution. True or false?
The uncritical nature of the BBC’s acceptance of evolution is seen in the belief that the giraffe's neck is the product of evolution over millions of years. The giraffe’s genome helps explain its long neck but does not support its evolutionary origin as Dr. Elizabeth Mitchell explains:
For example, when the giraffe lowers its long neck (which contains seven vertebrae) to the ground, its uniquely designed cardiovascular system (two meters in length in the neck and a blood pressure about twice that of humans) helps prevent a rush of blood to the head. The giraffe's uniquely designed neck shows that it cannot have developed slowly over many generations through natural selection, as its structures and systems need to work together.
4. Evolution can cause an individual to change during their lifetime. True or false?
Here, the BBC answer reveals one of the starkest differences between creation and evolution—the source of the genetic variety that exists among species. Evolutionists attribute all genetic differences ultimately to mutation. In contrast, multiple lines of scientific evidence reveal that most genetic differences stem from the initial creation act.4 Not only does this discovery rebut the foundation of evolution, it leads to an entire scientific research program—one that is actively being pursued.
EVOLUTIONISTS ATTRIBUTE ALL GENETIC DIFFERENCES ULTIMATELY TO MUTATION. IN CONTRAST, MULTIPLE LINES OF SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE REVEAL THAT MOST GENETIC DIFFERENCES STEM FROM THE INITIAL CREATION ACT
5. Humans are descended from monkeys. True or false?
It is false to say that evolutionists believe we evolved from monkeys because what they believe is that humans descended from an ape-like creature. It is this assumption, however, that leads to the conclusion that humans and chimps are more than 90% genetically identical. However, recent genetic discoveries show that this is not the case as “…they are only 84% identical, which means that the two species differ by nearly 400 million (400,000,000) DNA letters!”.5 Evolutionists have offered many examples of our supposed ape-man ancestry: Neanderthal Man, Nebraska Man, Cro-Magnon Man, and so on. Today, Exhibit A in the attempt to show that humans evolved from an ape-like creature is Australopithecus afarensis, more popularly known as Lucy, who is dated at 3.2 million years old. Lucy’s bones, however, are far from being human; they are more like those of chimpanzees. The truth is that she was a knuckle-walker, similar to a baboon or gorilla.
6. Evolution results in progress; organisms are always getting better through evolution. True or false?
This BBC answer accurately reflects how evolutionists think change has happened over millions of years of evolutionary history. But does it reflect reality? Natural selection is indeed “limited by natural variation that appears…in a species.” But, as we’ve just discussed, the vast majority of this natural variation is not the result of chance but, rather, the result of the initial creation act by God. This dramatically changes how we view the progress or regress in species over time, and it changes our outlook for species’ progress/regress in the future.
7. Evolution and religion are not necessarily incompatible. True or false?
This is true and false. It’s true in that evolution is only consistently compatible with the religion of humanism.6 One cannot help thinking, however, that by religion the BBC really has Christianity in mind. If this is the case, then, it is true that evolution is incompatible with Christianity. The irony of trying to makeevolution compatible with the Christianity is that the first person to differ with it would have been Charles Darwin.7 In Darwin’s understanding of the world there never was a time that it was very good. Darwin realized somewhere along the line you have to ask the question: What kind of God would deliberately use a process of death, disease, famine, and struggle to make the world, and then declare it to be very good (Genesis 1:31)? Toward the end of his life Darwin described himself as an agnostic8 who rejected Jesus as the Son of God.9 Because the BBC accepts evolution as scientific fact, the answers given to the questions were understandable. However, the questions and answers were filled with logical fallacies and only show that the evidence when properly understand contradicts evolution.
Creation Research.