These are the words of Pierre Teihard de Chardin (May 1, 1881, and died on April 10, 1955) in The Future of Man, (written 1941, published 1959). This was after his death, since the church did not allow him to publish much during his lifetime. And though by the time of publication DNA had been discovered, that would have been beside the point to our priest. Neither DNA nor evolution theory really "explained' the appearance of the new. He was pointing his audience to the reality of man as part of a planetary wide growth, in a "Universe of convergent consciousness."
And In the words of his Britannica article
[W]hat is of permanent value in traditional philosophical thought can be maintained and even integrated with a modern scientific outlook if one accepts that the tendencies of material things are directed, either wholly or in part, beyond the things themselves toward the production of higher, more complex, more perfectly unified beings.
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