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What Darwin Didn’t Know

A Doctor Dissects the Theory of EvolutionGeoffrey Simmons

Darwin might have thought twice about publishing his theories if he had had access to today’s medical and microbiological discoveries. Drawing on years of research, Dr. Simmons demonstrates that the almost infinite complexity of the human anatomy simply could not have developed by chance. For example:

  • The body runs on “battery power”… from the hundreds of mitochondria in each cell
  • The two sexes — evolutionary theory cannot explain why they exist
  • Every cell is its own pharmacist, chemist, and metallurgist

Accessible, clearly presented, and utterly fascinating, What Darwin Didn’t Know shows the human body to be a marvelous system constructed by an infinitely wise Designer.

Praise

It’s full of fascinating, insightful, and inspiring information that supports faith in God and our Creator’s wise and intelligent design.

Christian Booksellers Association Marketplace

Read this book, whatever you might think. You’ll finish it a different person than you were when you began it.

The Statesman Journal

Geoffrey Simmons makes Darwinism’s sleight of hand plain to see.

William A. Dembski, PhD

The relentless detailing of biological elegance and complexity overwhelms facile Darwinism stories as a tidal wave overwhelms a beach.

Michael J. Behe, PhD

There is a tide of data mounting against the Darwinian concept that randomness cannot explain the wonder of life. In What Darwin Didn’t Know, Geoffrey Simmons converts the tide into a tidal wave of evidence.

Gerald Schroeder, PhD

Geoffrey Simmons

Fellow, Center for Science and Culture
Geoffrey Simmons is a retired internist in Eugene, Oregon, as well as an author, lecturer, and Fellow of Discovery Institute. He is the author of What Darwin Didn't Know and Billions of Missing Links, as well as other non-fiction books and six novels (including two medical satires). He is a former governor of the American Academy of Disaster Medicine, a past member of Sacred Heart Medical Center's Emergency Preparedness Committee, and a past president of his local medical society. He has lectured widely on disaster preparedness, and has been a medical correspondent for KABC in Los Angeles and KPNW in Eugene.