The Crusader

The Crusader
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 860
Release: 1922
Genre: Socialism and Christianity
ISBN:

The Creationist Debate, Second Edition

The Creationist Debate, Second Edition
Author: Arthur McCalla
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2013-08-29
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1623567912

Whereas scholarly study of Creationism usually places it in the context of religion and the history or philosophy of science, The Creationist Debate, here revised and completely updated in its second edition, has been written in the conviction that creationism is ultimately about the status of the Bible in the modern world. Creationism as a modern ideology exists in order to defend the authority of the Bible as a repository of transhistorical truth from the challenges of any and all historical sciences. It belongs to and is inseparable from Protestant Fundamentalists' desire to resubject the modern world to the authority of the inerrant Bible. Intelligent Design creationism, to the extent that it distinguishes itself from reactionary biblicism, is a program advocating a supernaturalist, providentialist understanding of the world. Accordingly, The Creationist Debate situates Creationism and Intelligent Design in relation to the rise, from the early modern period onwards, of historical thinking in various scientific and scholarly disciplines (including theories of the earth, chronology, civil history, geology, biblical criticism, paleontology, evolutionary biology, and anthropology) in their complex relationship to the status of the Bible as an historical authority. It argues that the debate over Creationism is at bottom a debate over how to interpret the biblical text rather than over how to interpret the world.

The Public

The Public
Author: Louis Freeland Post
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1282
Release: 1909
Genre: Periodicals
ISBN:

The Creationist Debate

The Creationist Debate
Author: Arthur McCalla
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2006-06-15
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1441190384

This book places the present Creationist opposition to the theory of evolution in historical context by setting out the ways in which, from the seventeenth century onwards, investigations of the history of the earth and of humanity have challenged the biblical views of chronology and human destiny, and the Christian responses to these challenges. The author's interest is not primarily directed to questions such as the epistemological status of scientific versus religious knowledge or the possibility of a Darwinian ethics, but rather to the problems, and various responses to the problems, raised in a particular historical period in the West for the Bible by the massive extension of the duration of geological time and human history.