Are We Here To Re-Create Ourselves: The Convergence of Designs by Geoffrey Simmons, M.D. is provocative, philosophical, scientific, religious, and just plain-old interesting.
“Is there an Intelligent Designer, rather than humans being the consequence of simple evolutionary accidents and natural selection?,” asks Dr. Simmons. “I believe something helped evolution along. The arrival of humans is impossible to explain by unguided evolution alone. That is, given the billions of complex steps needed and the incredible complexities of our different systems and senses. The origin of thinking and of consciousness are particularly hard to explain in evolutionary terms. So is the elusive “spark” of life.”
Dr. Simmons, who has published numerous books, including one that sold 350,000 copies and was optioned to Hollywood was a radio medical reporter, commentator and/or host on KABC (LA) and KPNW. He also had a show on KUGN “Doc Talk” for six years.
Dr. Geoffrey Simmons is a retired Internist with past Boards in Internal Medicine and Disaster Medicine. He also worked as a hospitalist for 15 years and has been the President of the local Medical Society (LCMS) and A Chair of Internal Medicine. He was voted in the “Top 100 Doctors in my Community” for years. He was a member of FEMA’s Regional Advisory Council for Region Ten (X), a CERT Trainer and a member of the Advisory Council for CERTS in the cities of Eugene and Springfield, OR. Dr. Simmons has lectured locally and nationally on disaster preparedness, including giving a seminar for NASA medical clinics. He has been in many Who’s Who books through the years under several categories and received the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award https://www.24-7pressrelease.com/press-release/457517/geoffrey-simmons-presented-with-the-albert-nelson-marquis-lifetime-achievement-award-by-marquis-whos-who. Dr. Simmons has been a Fellow with the Discovery Institute in Seattle for 12 years and he has lectured on Intelligent Design (ID) across the Northwest and on radio many times.



