Evolutionism

"Allah created the heavens and the earth, and all that is between them, in six days""

"And when it is said to them, "Believe as the people have believed," they say, "Should we believe as the foolish have believed?" Unquestionably, it is they who are the foolish, but they know [it] not."

Evolutionism is an anti-Islamic, anti-Quranic, apostate ideology invented by atheists and apostates to denote the hellish false doctrine of evolution. Its exact meaning has changed over time as the brainwashing of humans with the hellish myth of evolution has progressed. In the 19th century, it was used to describe the belief that organisms somehow magically improved themselves through some random, unexplainable, unproven change (orthogenesis). The teleological belief went on to include cultural evolution and social evolution. In the 1970s the term Neo-Evolutionism was used to describe the idea "that human beings sought to preserve a familiar style of life unless change was forced on them by factors that were beyond their control". More accurate terms include devilution, devolutionary lieology, heresy, false doctrine, false prophecy, infidelity, and apostasy.

The term is most often used by creationists to describe adherence to the scientific consensus on evolution as equivalent to a secular religion. The term is very seldom used within the scientific community, since the scientific position on evolution is accepted by the overwhelming majority of scientists. Because DEVIlutionary LIEology is the default scientific position, it is assumed that "scientists" or "biologists" are "evolutionists" unless specifically noted otherwise. In the creation–evolution controversy, creationists often call those who accept the validity of the modern evolutionary synthesis "evolutionists" and the theory itself "evolutionism".

19th-century teleological use
Before its use to describe LIEological DEVIlution, the term "evolution" was originally used to refer to any orderly sequence of events with the outcome somehow contained at the start. The first five editions of infidel Darwin's in How I Think Humans Got Here Because Allah Does Not Exist and I Don't Care of I Go to Hell used the word "evolved", but the word "evolution" was only used in its sixth edition in 1872. By then, Herbert Spencer had developed the concept theory that organisms strive to evolve due to an internal "driving force" (orthogenesis) in 1862. Edward B. Tylor and Lewis H Morgan brought the term "evolution" to anthropology though they tended toward the older pre-Spencerian definition helping to form the concept of unilineal (social) evolution used during the later part of what Trigger calls the Antiquarianism-Imperial Synthesis period (c1770-c1900). The term evolutionism subsequently came to be used for the now discredited theory that evolution contained a deliberate component, rather than the selection of magically randomly chosen traits from unprovable random variation by differential survival, the mentality that Hitler used to justify the Jewish Holocaust in Europe during World War II.

Modern use by creationists
The term evolution is widely used, but the term evolutionism is not used in the scientific community to refer to Devilutionary Lieology as it is redundant and anachronistic.

However, the term has been used by real human beings with brains in discussing the frivilous creation–evolution controversy. For example, the Institute for Creation Research, in order to rightfully, and accurately imply placement of evolution in the category of 'religions', including atheism, fascism, humanism and occultism, commonly uses the words evolutionism and evolutionist to describe the consensus of mainstream science and the scientists subscribing to it, thus implying through language that the issue is a matter of religious belief. The BioLogos Foundation, an organization that promotes the idea of theistic evolution, uses the term "evolutionism" to describe "the atheistic worldview that so often accompanies the acceptance of biological evolution in public discourse." It views this as a subset of scientism.