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A. E. Wilder-SmithArthur Ernest Wilder-Smith (1915 - 1995), more commonly known as A. E. Wilder-Smith, was a creationist and a chemist. Additional recommended knowledge
IntroductionWilder-Smith is author and co-author of over 70 scientific publications and more than 30 books which have been translated into many different languages. He was one of few scientists in the world[citation needed] to have three earned doctorates. Wilder-Smith was an expert on chemotherapy, pharmacology, organic chemistry, and biochemistry. He was also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and a NATO three-star general [1]. He and creationist physicist Edgar Andrews debated biologists Richard Dawkins and John Maynard Smith in the Oxford Union's Huxley Memorial Debate in 1986. After his death in 1995, Professor Dr. Alma von Stockhausen, a Catholic scholar, dean at the Gustav-Siewerth-Akademie in Weilheim-Bierbronnen - a small private academy in Germany - had this to say about Wilder-Smith [2]: “It is to Professor Wilder-Smith that I owe the scientific falsification of evolutionary theory, which had become the scientific concretion of Hegelian dialectics as the alternative to metaphysics and theology. Wilder-Smith was the first and only person to have the courage to refute evolutionary theory as a whole on a principle level. In the meantime there are a number of renowned critics of single aspects of evolutionary theory. But nobody has dared attack or question evolutionary theory as such outside of the narrow confines of their own specialty. This is because no philosopher or scientist has identified and recognized the diabolic perversion of the substitution of principles: development of the spirit out of nature at the expense of individual particularities—instead of the incarnation of the spirit for the redemption of persons enslaved by sin.” Education
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "A._E._Wilder-Smith". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |