Creationism is not considered scientifically accurate because it is based on religious beliefs rather than empirical evidence. It does not align with the overwhelming scientific consensus that evolution is the best explanation for the diversity of life on Earth, as supported by extensive research in fields like genetics, Paleontology, and Biology. Creationism is not falsifiable or testable in the same way that scientific theories are.
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.
Creationism is the belief that life and the universe were created by a supernatural being, typically in the religious sense, rather than through natural processes like evolution. Creationism often rejects scientific explanations for the origin of life and promotes the idea of a divine creator.
Creationism was "created" in the 20th century to give a 'scientific' justification to the Christian religious belief that God created everything. There are several problems with Creationnism. - It is generally not supported by scientific facts. - It too often focuses on the unknown or or unexplained gaps in the theory of evolution claiming those "unknowns" are evidence for God's existence. Roughly, it is a "evolution cannot disprove God, so they are wrong, therefore God exists" argument.
According to Wikipedia, Creationism is the religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe were created in their original form by a deity (often the Abrahamic God of Judaism, Christianity and Islam) or deities.Initially, Creationism developed as a response by a minority of Christians to the Theory of Evolution. Its advocates attempted to have Creationism taught, in US schools, in science classes as a valid alternative to evolution. The courts blocked this attempt, on the grounds that Creationism is a topic of religion and to teach it in science classes would breach the separation of church and state.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
Richard Dawkins is the Charles Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science, at Oxford University. In this position, he clearly has a sound understanding of scientific issues such as evolution and the creation of the universe. This has led him to believe that Creationism is inherently untrue. Since his role is to advance the public understaning of Science, he has written books such as The God Delusion(Bantam Press, 2006) to explain his views.I think that Professor Dawkins sees Creationism as dependently linked to religious belief. Where he views Creationism to contend with Science, which he asserts is quite often, Dawkins prefers to focus on the inherent failure of the underlying religious belief rather than simply demonstrating the error of the Creationist belief and leaving the proponent to continue in his or her religious beliefs.The debate around creationism and evolution is more fully covered in: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
Technically, there is no such thing as scientific creationism. Creationism is per definition un- or even anti-scientific.
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.
No.
In Focus - 2009 Creationism was released on: USA: 10 December 2012
Creationism is the basis of all religions, it is what science says is not true. Teaching it in a public school is illegal.
Creationism can be taught in public schools in America after the Supreme court ruling of Stone v. Graham.
Creationism can and should be taught in a sociology classroom setting, but not in a science classroom like some people want it to be. The reason for this is that creationism is not a scientific theory or even principle, it's part of cultural mythology.
According to a 2009 Pew Research Center survey, about 33 of scientists in the United States believe in creationism.