Journal of Creation archive > Volume 32 Issue 2
Journal of Creation
Volume 32, Issue 2
Published August 2018
127 pages
Click here to subscribe to the Journal of Creation
Contents:
Page |
Title |
3–4 | Creation argument against the big bang no longer sustainable—CMB shadows and galaxy clusters Perspective by John G. Hartnett |
5–7 | Tunnel valleys can be formed in one ice age by catastrophic flow Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
8–11 | ERVs and LINEs—along novel lines of thinking Perspective by Peer Terborg |
11–12 | Still another difficulty in using foraminifera to reconstruct secular paleohistories Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
13–15 | Is it time to make human-chimp hybrids? Perspective by Jerry Bergman and Jeffrey Tomkins |
15–17 | Cosmology’s fatal weakness—underdetermination Perspective by John G. Hartnett |
18–19 | Dinosaur classification in a tumult Perspective by Michael J. Oard |
20–28 | Creationist modelling of the origins of Canis lupus familiaris—ancestry, timing, and biogeography Overview by Cody J. Guitard |
29–34 | The theory of true narrative representations and some of its applications Overview by John W. Oller Jr, Latayne C. Scott, and Brenden D. Oller |
35–37 | Bestselling British journalist, a gay atheist, confirms the toxicity of Darwinism to the Christian faith A review of The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, identity, Islam (Douglas Murray) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
37–41 | Unmasking Natural Selection A review of 40 Years of Evolution: Darwin’s finches on Daphne Major Island (Peter and Rosemary Grant) Book Review by Jean K. Lightner |
42–47 | A detailed rehash of all the canned anti-creationist shibboleths A review of God’s Word or Human Reason? An inside perspective on creationism (Jonathan Kane, Emily Willoughby, and T. Michael Keesey) Book Review by John Woodmorappe |
48–49 | The Catholic revival of creation science A review of Creation, Evolution, and Catholicism: A discussion for those who believe (Thomas L. McFadden) Book Review by Michael J. Oard |
50–53 | The feminine side of eugenics A review of Hitler’s Furies: German women in the Nazi killing fields, 4th edition (Wendy Lower) Book Review by Jerry Bergman |
54–57 | Ubiquity of convergence—are evolutionary outcomes inevitable? A review of Improbable Destinies: Fate, chance, and the future of evolution (Jonathan B. Losos) Book review by John Woodmorappe |
58–59 | Extensive mixing among Israelites and non-Israelites in biblical history Letter from James Denning. Reply: Robert Carter |
59–60 | Was Terah dead when Abram left Haran? Letter from Chuck Roehrich. Reply: Andrew Sibley |
60–62 | Swinging too far to the other side Letter from Jean O’Micks. Reply: Michael Oard |
63–69 | The probability of God: a response to Dawkins Countering the Critics by Nick Kastelein |
70–78 | Flood processes into the late Cenozoic: part 5—geomorphological evidence Viewpoint by Michael J. Oard |
79–82 | What does the catechism of the Roman Catholic Church say about creation? Viewpoint by Matthew Cserhati |
83–90 | Chronology and the Gezer connection—Solomon, Thutmose III, Shishak and Hatshepsut Viewpoint by Anne Habermehl |
91–95 | Roman Catholic confusion on creation Viewpoint by Benno Zuiddam |
96–102 | Developmental gene regulatory networks—an insurmountable impediment to evolution Paper by Jeffrey P. Tomkins and Jerry Bergman |
103–109 | Christian theology and the rise of Newtonian science—imposed law and the divine will Paper by Dominic Statham |
110–117 | Origen, origins, and allegory Paper by Andrew Sibley |
118–123 | Salt magma and sediments interfingered Paper by Stef J. Heerema and Gert-Jan H.A. van Heugten |
124–127 | Effective population sizes and loss of diversity during the Flood bottleneck Research Note by Rob Carter |
Readers’ comments
Comments are automatically closed 14 days after publication.