Journal of Creation archive > Volume 33 Issue 2
Journal of Creation
Volume 33, Issue 2
Published August 2019
127 pages
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Contents:
Page |
Title |
3–4 | Many paths lead to high-altitude adaptation Perspective by Jean K. Lightner |
5–7 | Darwin’s Point Perspective by Jerry Bergman |
7–9 | A case for rapid formation of calcareous concretions Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
9–12 | Some strengths and weaknesses of the polymers shield explanation for soft tissue fossils Perspective by Brian Thomas, Stephen Taylor, and Kevin Anderson |
13–15 | New evidence for rapid Ice Age deposition on the Greenland Ice Sheet Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
16–17 | Waterfall formation may not need tectonics or climate change Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
18–22 | AI and the secular vision to redefine life itself A review of Life 3.0: Being human in the age of Artificial Intelligence (Max Tegmark) Book Review by Lucien Tuinstra |
22–28 | Einstein’s physics says there is no biblical creationist starlight travel-time problem A review of The Physics of Einstein: Black holes, time travel, distant starlight, E=mc2 (Jason Lisle) Book Review by John G. Hartnett |
28–30 | Rigid uniformitarianism and a hysterical fear of the scientific creationist bogeyman A review of Timefulness: How thinking like a geologist can help save the world (Marcia Bjornerud) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
30–33 | The Missoula Flood—analogue for the greatest flood of all A review of Bretz’s Flood: The remarkable story of a rebel geologist and the world’s greatest flood (John Soennichsen) Book Review by Edward Isaacs |
33–37 | A book about human errors that don’t exist A review of Human Errors: A panorama of our glitches, from pointless bones to broken genes (Nathan H. Lents) Book Review by Jerry Bergman |
38–42 | Mankind undone: the evolutionary identity crisis A review of The Human Instinct: How we evolved to have reason, consciousness, and free will (Kenneth R. Miller) Book Review by Keaton Halley |
42–46 | A rather pro-evolutionary author who mischaracterizes evolutionary transitional forms A review of The Quest (Todd Wood) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
46–50 | Matti Leisola—bioengineer dumps Darwin, declares design A review of Heretic: One scientist’s journey from Darwin to design (Matti Leisola and Jonathan Witt) Book Review by Gavin Cox |
51–56 | A successful decade for ‘Mendel’s Accountant’ Overview by Rob W. Carter |
57–60 | Biblical Ice Age solves uniformitarian global end-Pleistocene mass extinction debate Overview by Michael J. Oard |
61–64 | Hydroplate Theory—problems for trench formation in the Pacific Basin Letter from Bruce Armstrong. Reply: Edward Isaacs |
65–72 | Orang-outang or Homo sylvestris: ape-men before Darwin Paper by Andrew Sibley |
73–76 | The effects of the Curse visible in the cosmos present another biblical creationist starlight travel-time problem Paper by John G. Hartnett |
77–83 | The Continuous Environmental Tracking hypothesis—application in seed dormancy and germination in forest ecosystems Paper by Tom Hennigan and Randy Guliuzza |
84–92 | Destructive parasites: expressions of God’s creation? Paper by Warren A. Shipton |
93–98 | Feathered pterosaurs: ruffling the feathers of dinosaur evolution Paper by Joel Tay |
99–106 | Flood processes into the late Cenozoic—part 7: critique of a post-Flood Cenozoic Paper by Michael J. Oard |
107–112 | The green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii find safety in numbers by design Paper by Matthew Cserhati |
113–120 | A history of the United Methodist Church’s opposition to creationism and intelligent design Essay by Jerry Bergman |
121–127 | Examining the usage and scope of historical science—a response to Dr Carol Cleland and a defence of terminology Essay by Paul Price |
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