Minor adaptations and changes, as can be observed in living things today, are of course not denied or disproved by Creationism. What Creationism does deny is the notion that Evolution could bring about new species or even new organs.
See also:
Not at all. Adaptation can take place within the creationist beliefs.
Creationism is the belief that the account of the origin of things given in the Bible is the exact and literal truth.
Creationism, as a belief, a philosophy and a mindset, would be defined as an abstract noun; creationism as an event or a process would be a concrete noun. Nouns have no opposites; you cannot get "negative-creation" in the same way as you can get 1 and -1.
Dark Adaptation Light Adaptation Hearing Adaptation Touch Adaptation Smell Adaptation
Creationism basically promotes an essentialist notion: the notion that life is static and lifeforms unchanging. The facts show that life is continually diverging, stemming from common ancestors. This disproves the notion of special creation of modern lifeforms, and the notion that such lifeforms are essentially unchanging.
Simply; none.
No where. Science has yet to prove or disprove Creationism
No. Because creationism is the belief a deity created life. If aliens were proved to exist, it would not negate it because there would still be no evidence to prove or disprove the fact they were also created by a deity.
Technically, there is no such thing as scientific creationism. Creationism is per definition un- or even anti-scientific.
The scientific view on creationism is that there is no scientific evidence supporting it.
Answer By definition creationism is theistic.
The ISBN of Creationism's Trojan Horse is 0195157427.
Fiat Creationism
Creationism's Trojan Horse has 416 pages.
Creationism's Trojan Horse was created on 2004-01-08.
Creationism is the belief that the account of the origin of things given in the Bible is the exact and literal truth.
Example sentence - The scientists were attempting to disprove the theory.
No.