The Earth resembles an immense military camp. Within this vast encampment live hundreds of thousands of different nations (species). Every soldier (living creature) is provided, at precisely the right time, with the equipment, tools, weapons, and clothing it requires—without confusion, without omission, and without a single mistake.
Every Living Being Is Equipped for Its Environment
We observe that every living creature is provided with exactly the instruments it needs to sustain its life.
According to modern taxonomy, approximately 1.2 million species have been formally identified, while scientists estimate that the actual number of species on Earth may be close to 8.7 million.
Each of these millions of species inhabits a completely different environment:
- Polar bears survive in temperatures as low as –40°C.
- Desert camels can endure days without water.
- Deep-sea organisms live under pressures exceeding one thousand atmospheres.
- Migratory birds navigate thousands of kilometres without losing their route.
What is truly remarkable is that these creatures do not resemble machines that were later modified to adapt to their surroundings. Rather, they come into existence already equipped with the precise capabilities required for the conditions in which they live.
Some questions don’t need answers — just space.
Ask yoursConsider the human eye.
The human eye contains approximately 126 million photoreceptor cells and is capable of processing nearly 10 million bits of visual information every second.
Yet, according to the principle of providing each creature with what it specifically needs, the eye of an eagle has been equipped to see four to eight times farther than a human eye, with enough precision to detect a rabbit from approximately 3.2 kilometres away.
Modern engineering has succeeded in producing cameras with extraordinary image quality. Nevertheless, the eagle's eye still possesses remarkable features that continue to inspire biomimetic research, including:
- Automatic focusing
- Motion tracking
- Depth perception
- Adaptation to intense sunlight
When we acknowledge that a camera requires a designer, it becomes logically difficult to explain why an eye containing millions of photoreceptor cells should be regarded as existing without one.