About This Book
This work challenges evolutionary explanations and defends a creationist account, arguing that the origin of matter, life, and species involved a distinct, non-repeatable divine act rather than gradual processes; it surveys evidence from geology, biology, and physics, critiques uniformitarian assumptions and scientific specialization, questions claims that life can arise from non-life, and emphasizes the limits of inferring origins from present-day processes. It aims to reassess scientific claims by advocating a broad interdisciplinary survey rather than narrow specialization.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians
by Charles Ebert Orr
An Annotated Check List of the Mammals of Michoacán, México
by E. Raymond Hall
Zones of the Spirit: A Book of Thoughts
by August Strindberg
The Story of Noah's Ark
by E. Boyd Smith
Principles of Teaching
by Adam S. Bennion
A Chesterton Calendar / Compiled from the writings of 'G.K.C.' both in verse and in prose. With a section apart for the moveable feasts.
by G. K. Chesterton
