We've all seen the drawings. They range from microscopic creatures to large animals. They depict living things in many forms.
I'm referring to drawings and paintings that evolutionists have had artists draw. The drawings include their ideas of the early forms of man. And, a drawing or painting can be worth a thousand words. One simple illustration can help to make people think what you want them to think, or at least, guide them in that direction.
But, "art" goes beyond paint or pencils. Evolutionists can also be incredible artists when it comes either to "creative thought", or artful descriptions. One form of this is scientific "high speak", in which technical terminology is used to make the whole idea sound complex and legitimately scientific. This will intimidate most people.
Actually, the whole evolution story itself is a "creative" way to avoid the obvious design seen in everything, everywhere. But, sometimes specific examples can be downright humorous. A stark example of this is in an explanation that one of them came up with to describe the origin of flowering plants - something over which Darwin himself was extremely frustrated, calling it "that abominable mystery".
To quote from The Encyclopedia of Evolution: "Paleontologist Robert Bakker proposed an exciting new theory that flowers were "invented" by dinosaurs!" Yes, you read that right! The scientist spins an artful tale describing the different rates of evolution between dinosaurs and plants. Ground plants and flowers were apparently evolving at precisely the time when dinosaurs were at a stage when they were eating
higher vegetation, like leaves, and not the ground plants, and this gave the flowering plants the break they needed to thrive.
Somehow this means that dinosaurs "invented" them! Dr. Bakker wondered how others overlooked this obvious phenomenon, calling it an "incredible oversight".
Another stab at this topic, according to the encyclopedia, comes from botanist Anthony Huxley, who stated: "Insects sought food and first went after pollen. To distract them from this, plants developed nectar as a substitute, while their flowers became increasingly insect attractive, with scents, colors, and guide patterns."
These are examples of the "art" of evolutionary science. Actually, pure imagination. What's amazing to me is that there are still so many people who would actually take this type of description seriously!