So you don't know what evolutionary theory is, either. Evolutionary theory makes no claims about the origin of life. Darwin himself just assumed that God created the first living things.
It is often claimed that evolutionary theory “makes no claims about the origin of life” and that “Darwin assumed God created the first living things.” While this statement is sometimes presented as a corrective, it is at best incomplete and at worst historically misleading.
It is true that Darwin’s theory of natural selection primarily addressed the diversification of life, not the first appearance of life itself. But it is not true that evolutionary thought—either in Darwin’s own writings or in modern evolutionary biology—has remained silent on origins.
Let’s look at the record.
Darwin Did Not Consistently Assume Divine Creation of First Life. He publicly avoided speculation about origins in On the Origin of Species (1859), largely because the chemistry of life was unknown. But privately, he was far less theologically confident.
In an 1871 letter to Joseph Hooker, Darwin famously wrote:
“It is often said that all the conditions for the first production of a living organism are now present, which could ever have been present. But if (and oh what a big if) we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, etc., present, that a protein compound was chemically formed ready to undergo still more complex changes…”
This is explicit speculation about abiogenesis, not an appeal to divine creation.
Darwin did not assert God created the first life; he admitted ignorance publicly and speculated naturalistically in private.
Leading Evolutionists Explicitly Extend Evolution to Life’s Origin
Whatever Darwin’s caution, modern evolutionary theory does not stop at existing life.
Richard Dawkins is explicit:
“Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.”
(The Blind Watchmaker, 1986)
And more directly:
“The origin of life was almost certainly a chemical event, but we don’t know exactly how it happened.”
(The Blind Watchmaker)
Dawkins clearly treats abiogenesis as a natural extension of evolutionary explanation, not a separate, unrelated issue.
Evolutionary Biology Routinely Addresses Abiogenesis
George Gaylord Simpson, one of the architects of the Modern Synthesis, wrote:
“Man is the result of a purposeless and natural process that did not have him in mind.”
(The Meaning of Evolution, 1949)
That “natural process” explicitly includes the entire history of life, not merely post-origin diversification.
Similarly, Jacques Monod stated:
“Chance alone is at the source of every innovation, of all creation in the biosphere.”
(Chance and Necessity, 1970)
This is not a limited claim about speciation—it is a claim about origins.
Abiogenesis Is Treated as Part of the Evolutionary Framework
Francis Crick, co-discoverer of DNA, wrote:
“The origin of life appears almost a miracle, so many are the conditions which would have had to have been satisfied to get it going.”
(Life Itself, 1981)
Crick did not exclude the origin of life from evolutionary consideration; he regarded it as a profound problem within naturalistic biology.
Likewise, Ernst Mayr:
“The origin of life is a problem that must ultimately be solved by chemistry and physics.”
(What Evolution Is, 2001)
Again, no appeal to divine creation—only natural mechanisms.
Why the Claim Persists (and Why It Misleads)
The statement “evolution doesn’t address the origin of life” is often used rhetorically to shield evolutionary theory from critique at its weakest point. While natural selection strictly requires life to already exist, the broader evolutionary worldview explicitly assumes that life arose through unguided natural processes.
That assumption is not theological neutrality—it is philosophical naturalism.
Darwin’s caution does not bind modern evolutionists, and many of the most influential voices in evolutionary biology have been explicit: life’s origin is expected to be explained by the same unguided processes that explain its diversity.
Yes, Darwin focused on diversification rather than first life.
No, he did not clearly assert divine creation of the first organisms.
And modern evolutionary theory—far from remaining silent—actively asserts that life arose naturally, even if the mechanism remains unresolved.