The Population Issue
The Population Issue
When discussing holes in the evolutionary theory, there are many different things to examine but one of my personal favorites to bring up is the glaring population issue involved with an evolutionary timeline. Science generally agrees that modern humans or “Homo sapiens” have been around for about 300,000 years or so and if you want to go back even further to “Homo erectus” (which is the first species to walk upright like modern man) science says they lived around 2.3 million years ago…
Looking at the biblical timeline of when Noah and his family of eight people left the ark puts us at around 4,300-4,400 years ago. Let's look at some census data really fast. According to the data, by the year 1800, we had a population of 1 billion people, and as of the time of this writing we are currently at around 8.3 billion. That’s quite a lot of people in a relatively short period of time!
So, one of my favorite stumbling blocks for atheists and evolutionists is simply this: “if we’ve been around for 300,000+ years, then why isn’t our population significantly higher? If their timeline were true, then the global population would potentially be in the trillions by now or at least a few hundred billion. We’ve had census data for most of human history, and even throughout such terrible events like World Wars I & II, disease, famine, plagues, etc., the population has generally stayed in a positive uptick over the course of human history. Even allotting them a slow average growth rate of 0.5% per year over tens of thousands of years would explode into a number far greater than the Earth is capable of even holding.
So why is it that, for 295,000 years of the “modern human” era the population was basically stagnant and then as soon as we get to the real numbers that coincide with the Bible is when our species began to see a huge uptick? Seems like a funny coincidence to me… Evolution’s answer to this “genetic bottleneck” is full of things like potential food shortages, natural disasters, general theories lacking clear and credible evidence, or simply, we don’t know…
So, as soon as we get to the years that coincide with the biblical timeline is when we humans figured out how to survive and start aggressively populating the earth? What took us so long??
Think about this, the first language which is Sumerian is dated to be approximately 5,000 years old. There are ancient Sumerian clay tablets from this time period and they are actually the oldest pieces of written history. So, if we as a species have been around for 300,000+ years, then why on Earth would it take us so long to figure out how to write things down for preservation purposes and develop a simple language system? Just take a look at how far we’ve come in the last 100 years or even the last 50 years! Nowadays, we’re experimenting with quantum physics and mechanics. 100 years ago, the stuff we’re doing wouldn’t have been dreamed of let alone put into practice.
Most people I debate honestly don’t have a good answer for this problem because it genuinely is a glaring hole in the evolutionary theory. Some people want to cite issues such as sanitation issues, high infant mortality, and things of that nature. And yes, these things did play a role in our early human history but the idea that it took nearly 300,000 years to figure these things out is ludicrous and baseless. In the beginning, there was Adam & Eve and over the course of about 1,600 years there were potentially several hundred million people on Earth before the flood came. After the flood when we had to do a hard reset as a species we’re now at 8.3 billion people as a whole. For the Evolutionary thinkers, the numbers don’t add up. But they fit perfectly in with the biblical creation account.





