It is part of our mission here at OBJECTIVE: Creation Education to bring understanding of Creation Science to the masses who are unable to learn about true science in the Secular controlled media and education systems. In this article, I will introduce to you a new advancement in Creation Science terminology that you will be seeing used more often in the future. Creation Scientists often talk about kinds when referring both to the original creations of the Lord and those that were preserved from the Flood on Noah’s Ark. Evolutionists attack this discussion by claiming that kinds is an undefined and loose term. To an extent, the Evolutionists have a point; the word kind, while understood perfectly by Creation Scientists when used in its Scriptural sense, can lead to confusion among the general audience due to its loose usage in non-technical speech. This confusion is what the Evolutionist unfairly takes advantage of when trying to disparage Creation Systematics, or the classifying of created organisms. Realizing this, Creation Scientists — led in 1990 by Kurt P. Wise and Walter ReMine — have developed a new terminological system whose goal is to aid both researchers in their research and the general […]
Sunday, April 8th, 2007
Baraminology
Author: RICHARD PALEY
Source: objectiveministries.com
Publication Date: 19-Mar-07
Link: Baraminology
Source: objectiveministries.com
Publication Date: 19-Mar-07
Link: Baraminology
Stephan: What to do when you hold a position that is contradicted by the accumulated corpus of scientific knowledge in a dozen disciplines -- why create a parallel science for your parallel world, of course. It is important to stay in touch with the thinking of the Religious Right, because it is a voting bloc that can strongly influence everyone's life.
To learn more about baraminology:
'Baraminology -- Classification of Created Organisms'
By Wayne Frair, Ph.D, Originally published in CRS Quarterly, Vol. 37, Num. 2, Sept. 2000.
'A Quantitative Approach to Baraminology With Examples from the Catarrhine Primates'
By. D. Ashley Robinson and David P. Cavanaugh, CRS Quarterly, Vol. 34, Num. 4, March 1998. 'In this report we examine some quantitative methods which may be applied to a variety of biological data to empirically estimate the identity of holobaramins.'
'The Current Status of Baraminology'
By Todd Charles Wood, CRS Quarterly, Vol. 43, Num. 3, Dec. 2006. 'The creationist biosystematic method of baraminology has grown significantly in the past decade.'