The purpose of creationism is to create controversy. In fact, without controversy, creationism would cease to exist.
Creationism evolved as a group of related, but sometimes highly inconsistent concepts that its proponents hoped would be taught in schools alongside science, and thereby bolster literal belief in the biblical creation stories. The concern was that, as the Theory of Evolution became more and more widely accepted, not only in the scientific community, but in general society, people would begin to see the biblical creation stories as allegories rather than as history. And the fear was that if people no longer believed the biblical creation stories, they would cease to be Christians.
Major denominations say that creationism is not central to Christian faith, and scientists say that creationism is not scientifically valid. So, creationism needs controversy in order to be noticed.
For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/theology/the-story-of-creation
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.
Evolution does NOT involve creationism.Evolution is a testable and therefore provable explanation as to how the diversity of life on earth has happened.Creationism is a religious viewpoint and therefore a mater of faith.AnswerI agree with the above. Evolution does NOT involve Creationism. Evolution is a branch of biological science and thus rejects "supernatural" claims such as those of Creationism, does not need to consider them. Creationism, often hanging on Genesis, the first book of the Bible, predates scientific inquiry and the scientific method and so is thus rejected by science and thus evolutionary science. In the public spotlight, the so-called Evolution-Creation "controversy" and all the on-stage arguments and debates might make it seem as though Evolution and Creationism (and Intelligent Design) have a lot to do with one another, but I doubt Creationism gets much mention at all in scientific laboratories and scientific conferences (it can't because it hasn't got anything to say about the real world.)
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
Most certainly not side-by-side. That would imply that they are equivalent notions. Evolution, however, is a scientific theory, and creationism is religious myth. Evolution belongs in biology classes, creationism in something like comparative religion courses.
Darwin presented exstensive evidence from many areas of biology to support his ideas
Creationism is faith based, and naturally faith varies from person to person; whether their religion is different or they profess to Atheism. Also, It is not something that is objectively observable, and thus cannot be scientifically verified, and this creates rifts between Faith and the field of Science.
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
what is that
No.
Alan F. Alford has written: 'Gods of the new millennium' -- subject(s): Ancient Civilization, Civilization, Ancient, Controversial literature, Creationism, Extraterrestrial influences, Human beings, Human evolution, Origin