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Creationism
Creationism
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Creationism is the religious belief that nature, and aspects such as the universe, Earth, life, and humans, originated with supernatural acts of divine creation, and is often pseudoscientific.[1][2] In its broadest sense, creationism includes various religious views,[3][4] which differ in their acceptance or rejection of modern scientific concepts, such as evolution, that describe the origin and development of natural phenomena.[5][6]

The term creationism most often refers to belief in special creation: the claim that the universe and lifeforms were created as they exist today by divine action, and that the only true explanations are those which are compatible with a Christian fundamentalist literal interpretation of the creation myth found in the Bible's Genesis creation narrative.[7] Since the 1970s, the most common form of this has been Young Earth creationism which posits special creation of the universe and lifeforms within the last 10,000 years on the basis of flood geology, and promotes pseudoscientific creation science. From the 18th century onward, Old Earth creationism accepted geological time harmonized with Genesis through gap or day-age theory, while supporting anti-evolution. Modern old-Earth creationists support progressive creationism and continue to reject evolutionary explanations.[5] Following political controversy, creation science was reformulated as intelligent design and neo-creationism.[8][9]

Mainline Protestants and the Catholic Church reconcile modern science with their faith in Creation through forms of theistic evolution which hold that God purposefully created through the laws of nature, and accept evolution. Some groups call their belief evolutionary creationism.[5] Less prominently, there are also members of the Islamic[10][11], Jewish, and Hindu[12] faiths, among others, who are creationists. Use of the term "creationist" in this context dates back to Charles Darwin's unpublished 1842 sketch draft for what became On the Origin of Species,[13] and he used the term later in letters to colleagues.[14] In 1873, Asa Gray published an article in The Nation saying a "special creationist" who held that species "were supernaturally originated just as they are, by the very terms of his doctrine places them out of the reach of scientific explanation."[15]

Biblical basis

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The basis for many creationists' beliefs is a literal or quasi-literal interpretation of the Book of Genesis. The Genesis creation narratives (Genesis 1–2) describe how God brings the Universe into being in a series of creative acts over six days and places the first man and woman (Adam and Eve) in the Garden of Eden. This story is the basis of creationist cosmology and biology. The Genesis flood narrative (Genesis 6–9) tells how God destroys the world and all life through a great flood, saving representatives of each form of life by means of Noah's Ark. This forms the basis of creationist geology, better known as flood geology.

Recent decades have seen attempts to de-link creationism from the Bible and recast it as science; these include creation science and intelligent design.[16]

Types

[edit]

To counter the common misunderstanding that the creation–evolution controversy was a simple dichotomy of views, with "creationists" set against "evolutionists", Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education produced a diagram and description of a continuum of religious views as a spectrum ranging from extreme literal biblical creationism to materialist evolution, grouped under main headings. This was used in public presentations, then published in 1999 in Reports of the NCSE.[17] Other versions of a taxonomy of creationists were produced,[18] and comparisons made between the different groupings.[19] In 2009 Scott produced a revised continuum taking account of these issues, emphasizing that intelligent design creationism overlaps other types, and each type is a grouping of various beliefs and positions. The revised diagram is labelled to shows a spectrum relating to positions on the age of the Earth, and the part played by special creation as against evolution. This was published in the book Evolution Vs. Creationism: An Introduction,[20] and the NCSE website rewritten on the basis of the book version.[5]

The main general types are listed below.

Comparison of major creationist views
Humanity Biological species Earth Age of Universe
Young Earth creationism Directly created by God. Directly created by God. Macroevolution does not occur. Less than 10,000 years old. Reshaped by global flood. Less than 10,000 years old, but some hold this view only for the Solar System.
Gap creationism Scientifically accepted age. Reshaped by global flood. Scientifically accepted age.
Progressive creationism Directly created by God, based on primate anatomy. Direct creation + evolution. No single common ancestor. Scientifically accepted age. No global flood.
Intelligent design Proponents hold various beliefs. (For example, Michael Behe accepts evolution from primates.) Divine intervention at some point in the past, as evidenced by what intelligent-design creationists call "irreducible complexity." Some adherents accept common descent, others do not. Some claim the existence of Earth is the result of divine intervention.
Theistic evolution (evolutionary creationism) Evolution from primates. Evolution from single common ancestor. Scientifically accepted age. No global flood.

Young Earth creationism

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The Creation Museum is a young Earth creationism museum run by Answers in Genesis (AiG) in Petersburg, Kentucky, United States.
The ICR Discovery Center for Science & Earth History is a young Earth creationist museum run by Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in Dallas, Texas, United States.

Young Earth creationists such as Ken Ham and Doug Phillips believe that God created the Earth within the last ten thousand years, with a literalist interpretation of the Genesis creation narrative, within the approximate time-frame of biblical genealogies. Most young Earth creationists believe that the universe has a similar age as the Earth. A few assign a much older age to the universe than to Earth. Young Earth creationism gives the universe an age consistent with the Ussher chronology and other young Earth time frames. Other young Earth creationists believe that the Earth and the universe were created with the appearance of age, so that the world appears to be much older than it is, and that this appearance is what gives the geological findings and other methods of dating the Earth and the universe their much longer timelines.[citation needed]

The Christian organizations Answers in Genesis (AiG), Institute for Creation Research (ICR) and the Creation Research Society (CRS) promote young Earth creationism in the United States. Carl Baugh's Creation Evidence Museum in Texas, United States AiG's Creation Museum and Ark Encounter in Kentucky, United States were opened to promote young Earth creationism. Creation Ministries International promotes young Earth views in Australia, Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, the United States, and the United Kingdom.

Among Roman Catholics, the Kolbe Center for the Study of Creation promotes similar ideas.

Old Earth creationism

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Old Earth creationism holds that the physical universe was created by God, but that the creation event described in the Book of Genesis is to be taken figuratively. This group generally believes that the age of the universe and the age of the Earth are as described by astronomers and geologists, but that details of modern evolutionary theory are questionable.[5]

Old Earth creationism itself comes in at least three types:[5]

Gap creationism

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Gap creationism (also known as ruin-restoration creationism, restoration creationism, or the Gap Theory) is a form of old Earth creationism that posits that the six-yom creation period, as described in the Book of Genesis, involved six literal 24-hour days, but that there was a gap of time between two distinct creations in the first and the second verses of Genesis, which the theory states explains many scientific observations, including the age of the Earth. Thus, the six days of creation (verse 3 onwards) start sometime after the Earth was "without form and void." This allows an indefinite gap of time to be inserted after the original creation of the universe, but prior to the Genesis creation narrative, (when present biological species and humanity were created). Gap theorists can therefore agree with the scientific consensus regarding the age of the Earth and universe, while maintaining a literal interpretation of the biblical text.[21][22][23]

Some[which?] gap creationists expand the basic version of creationism by proposing a "primordial creation" of biological life within the "gap" of time. This is thought to be "the world that then was" mentioned in 2 Peter 3:3–6.[24] Discoveries of fossils and archaeological ruins older than 10,000 years are generally ascribed to this "world that then was," which may also be associated with Lucifer's rebellion.[25]

Day-age creationism

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Day-age creationism, a type of old Earth creationism, is a metaphorical interpretation of the creation accounts in Genesis. It holds that the six days referred to in the Genesis account of creation are not ordinary 24-hour days, but are much longer periods (from thousands to billions of years). The Genesis account is then reconciled with the age of the Earth. Proponents of the day-age theory can be found among both theistic evolutionists, who accept the scientific consensus on evolution, and progressive creationists, who reject it. The theories are said to be built on the understanding that the Hebrew word yom is also used to refer to a time period, with a beginning and an end and not necessarily that of a 24-hour day.

The day-age theory attempts to reconcile the Genesis creation narrative and modern science by asserting that the creation "days" were not ordinary 24-hour days, but actually lasted for long periods of time (as day-age implies, the "days" each lasted an age). According to this view, the sequence and duration of the creation "days" may be paralleled to the scientific consensus for the age of the earth and the universe.

Progressive creationism

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Progressive creationism is the religious belief that God created new forms of life gradually over a period of hundreds of millions of years. As a form of old Earth creationism, it accepts mainstream geological and cosmological estimates for the age of the Earth, some tenets of biology such as microevolution as well as archaeology to make its case. In this view creation occurred in rapid bursts in which all "kinds" of plants and animals appear in stages lasting millions of years. The bursts are followed by periods of stasis or equilibrium to accommodate new arrivals. These bursts represent instances of God creating new types of organisms by divine intervention. As viewed from the archaeological record, progressive creationism holds that "species do not gradually appear by the steady transformation of its ancestors; [but] appear all at once and "fully formed."[26]

The view rejects macroevolution, claiming it is biologically untenable and not supported by the fossil record,[27] as well as rejects the concept of common descent from a last universal common ancestor. Thus the evidence for macroevolution is claimed to be false, but microevolution is accepted as a genetic parameter designed by the Creator into the fabric of genetics to allow for environmental adaptations and survival. Generally, it is viewed by proponents as a middle ground between literal creationism and evolution. Organizations such as Reasons To Believe, founded by Hugh Ross, promote this version of creationism.

Progressive creationism can be held in conjunction with hermeneutic approaches to the Genesis creation narrative such as the day-age creationism or framework/metaphoric/poetic views.

Philosophic and scientific creationism

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Creation science

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Creation science, or initially scientific creationism, is a pseudoscience[a] that emerged in the 1960s with proponents aiming to have young Earth creationist beliefs taught in school science classes as a counter to teaching of evolution. Common features of creation science argument include: creationist cosmologies which accommodate a universe on the order of thousands of years old, criticism of radiometric dating through a technical argument about radiohalos, explanations for the fossil record as a record of the Genesis flood narrative (see flood geology), and explanations for the present diversity as a result of pre-designed genetic variability and partially due to the rapid degradation of the perfect genomes God placed in "created kinds" or "baramins" due to mutations.

Neo-creationism

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Neo-creationism is a pseudoscientific movement which aims to restate creationism in terms more likely to be well received by the public, by policy makers, by educators and by the scientific community. It aims to re-frame the debate over the origins of life in non-religious terms and without appeals to scripture. This comes in response to the 1987 ruling by the United States Supreme Court in Edwards v. Aguillard that creationism is an inherently religious concept and that advocating it as correct or accurate in public-school curricula violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.[33][34][35]

One of the principal claims of neo-creationism propounds that ostensibly objective orthodox science, with a foundation in naturalism, is actually a dogmatically atheistic religion.[36] Its proponents argue that the scientific method excludes certain explanations of phenomena, particularly where they point towards supernatural elements, thus effectively excluding religious insight from contributing to understanding the universe. This leads to an open and often hostile opposition to what neo-creationists term "Darwinism", which they generally mean to refer to evolution, but which they may extend to include such concepts as abiogenesis, stellar evolution and the Big Bang theory.

Unlike their philosophical forebears, neo-creationists largely do not believe in many of the traditional cornerstones of creationism such as a young Earth, or in a dogmatically literal interpretation of the Bible.

Intelligent design

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Intelligent design (ID) is the pseudoscientific view[37][38] that "certain features of the universe and of living things are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as natural selection."[39] All of its leading proponents are associated with the Discovery Institute,[40] a think tank whose wedge strategy aims to replace the scientific method with "a science consonant with Christian and theistic convictions" which accepts supernatural explanations.[41][42] It is widely accepted in the scientific and academic communities that intelligent design is a form of creationism,[b] and is sometimes referred to as "intelligent design creationism."[5][41][45][46][47][48]

ID originated as a re-branding of creation science in an attempt to avoid a series of court decisions ruling out the teaching of creationism in American public schools, and the Discovery Institute has run a series of campaigns to change school curricula.[49] In Australia, where curricula are under the control of state governments rather than local school boards, there was a public outcry when the notion of ID being taught in science classes was raised by the Federal Education Minister Brendan Nelson; the minister quickly conceded that the correct forum for ID, if it were to be taught, is in religious or philosophy classes.[50]

In the US, teaching of intelligent design in public schools has been decisively ruled by a federal district court to be in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. In Kitzmiller v. Dover, the court found that intelligent design is not science and "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents,"[51] and hence cannot be taught as an alternative to evolution in public school science classrooms under the jurisdiction of that court. This sets a persuasive precedent, based on previous US Supreme Court decisions in Edwards v. Aguillard and Epperson v. Arkansas (1968), and by the application of the Lemon test, that creates a legal hurdle to teaching intelligent design in public school districts in other federal court jurisdictions.[41][52]

Geocentrism

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In astronomy, the geocentric model (also known as geocentrism, or the Ptolemaic system), is a description of the cosmos where Earth is at the orbital center of all celestial bodies. This model served as the predominant cosmological system in many ancient civilizations such as ancient Greece. As such, they assumed that the Sun, Moon, stars, and naked eye planets circled Earth, including the noteworthy systems of Aristotle (see Aristotelian physics) and Ptolemy.

Articles arguing that geocentrism was the biblical perspective appeared in some early creation science newsletters associated with the Creation Research Society pointing to some passages in the Bible, which, when taken literally, indicate that the daily apparent motions of the Sun and the Moon are due to their actual motions around the Earth rather than due to the rotation of the Earth about its axis. For example, Joshua 10:12–13 where the Sun and Moon are said to stop in the sky, and Psalms 93:1 where the world is described as immobile.[53] Contemporary advocates for such religious beliefs include Robert Sungenis, co-author of the self-published Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right (2006).[54] These people subscribe to the view that a plain reading of the Bible contains an accurate account of the manner in which the universe was created and requires a geocentric worldview. Most contemporary creationist organizations reject such perspectives.[note 1]

Omphalos hypothesis

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The Omphalos hypothesis is one attempt to reconcile the scientific evidence that the universe is billions of years old with a literal interpretation of the Genesis creation narrative, which implies that the Earth is only a few thousand years old.[56] It is based on the religious belief that the universe was created by a divine being, within the past six to ten thousand years (in keeping with flood geology), and that the presence of objective, verifiable evidence that the universe is older than approximately ten millennia is due to the creator introducing false evidence that makes the universe appear significantly older.

The idea was named after the title of an 1857 book, Omphalos by Philip Henry Gosse, in which Gosse argued that in order for the world to be functional God must have created the Earth with mountains and canyons, trees with growth rings, Adam and Eve with fully grown hair, fingernails, and navels[57] (ὀμφαλός omphalos is Greek for "navel"), and all living creatures with fully formed evolutionary features, etc..., and that, therefore, no empirical evidence about the age of the Earth or universe can be taken as reliable.

Various supporters of Young Earth creationism have given different explanations for their belief that the universe is filled with false evidence of the universe's age, including a belief that some things needed to be created at a certain age for the ecosystems to function, or their belief that the creator was deliberately planting deceptive evidence. The idea has seen some revival in the 20th century by some modern creationists, who have extended the argument to address the "starlight problem". The idea has been criticised as Last Thursdayism, and on the grounds that it requires a deliberately deceptive creator.

Theistic evolution

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Theistic evolution, or evolutionary creation, is a belief that "the personal God of the Bible created the universe and life through evolutionary processes."[58] According to the American Scientific Affiliation:

A theory of theistic evolution (TE) – also called evolutionary creation – proposes that God's method of creation was to cleverly design a universe in which everything would naturally evolve. Usually the "evolution" in "theistic evolution" means Total Evolution – astronomical evolution (to form galaxies, solar systems,...) and geological evolution (to form the earth's geology) plus chemical evolution (to form the first life) and biological evolution (for the development of life) – but it can refer only to biological evolution.[59]

Through the 19th century the term creationism most commonly referred to direct creation of individual souls, in contrast to traducianism. Following the publication of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, there was interest in ideas of Creation by divine law. In particular, the liberal theologian Baden Powell argued that this illustrated the Creator's power better than the idea of miraculous creation, which he thought ridiculous.[60] When On the Origin of Species was published, the cleric Charles Kingsley wrote of evolution as "just as noble a conception of Deity."[61][62] Darwin's view at the time was of God creating life through the laws of nature,[63][64] and the book makes several references to "creation," though he later regretted using the term rather than calling it an unknown process.[65] In America, Asa Gray argued that evolution is the secondary effect, or modus operandi, of the first cause, design,[66] and published a pamphlet defending the book in theistic terms, Natural Selection not inconsistent with Natural Theology.[61][67][68] Theistic evolution, also called, evolutionary creation, became a popular compromise, and St. George Jackson Mivart was among those accepting evolution but attacking Darwin's naturalistic mechanism. Eventually it was realised that supernatural intervention could not be a scientific explanation, and naturalistic mechanisms such as neo-Lamarckism were favoured as being more compatible with purpose than natural selection.[69]

Some theists took the general view that, instead of faith being in opposition to biological evolution, some or all classical religious teachings about Christian God and creation are compatible with some or all of modern scientific theory, including specifically evolution; it is also known as "evolutionary creation." In Evolution versus Creationism, Eugenie Scott and Niles Eldredge state that it is in fact a type of evolution.[70]

It generally views evolution as a tool used by God, who is both the first cause and immanent sustainer/upholder of the universe; it is therefore well accepted by people of strong theistic (as opposed to deistic) convictions. Theistic evolution can synthesize with the day-age creationist interpretation of the Genesis creation narrative; however most adherents consider that the first chapters of the Book of Genesis should not be interpreted as a "literal" description, but rather as a literary framework or allegory.

From a theistic viewpoint, the underlying laws of nature were designed by God for a purpose, and are so self-sufficient that the complexity of the entire physical universe evolved from fundamental particles in processes such as stellar evolution, life forms developed in biological evolution, and in the same way the origin of life by natural causes has resulted from these laws.[71]

In one form or another, theistic evolution is the view of creation taught at the majority of mainline Protestant seminaries.[72] For Roman Catholics, human evolution is not a matter of religious teaching, and must stand or fall on its own scientific merits. Evolution and the Roman Catholic Church are not in conflict. The Catechism of the Catholic Church comments positively on the theory of evolution, which is neither precluded nor required by the sources of faith, stating that scientific studies "have splendidly enriched our knowledge of the age and dimensions of the cosmos, the development of life-forms and the appearance of man."[73] Roman Catholic schools teach evolution without controversy on the basis that scientific knowledge does not extend beyond the physical, and scientific truth and religious truth cannot be in conflict.[74] Theistic evolution can be described as "creationism" in holding that divine intervention brought about the origin of life or that divine laws govern formation of species, though many creationists (in the strict sense) would deny that the position is creationism at all. In the creation–evolution controversy, its proponents generally take the "evolutionist" side. This sentiment was expressed by Fr. George Coyne, (the Vatican's chief astronomer between 1978 and 2006):

...in America, creationism has come to mean some fundamentalistic, literal, scientific interpretation of Genesis. Judaic-Christian faith is radically creationist, but in a totally different sense. It is rooted in a belief that everything depends upon God, or better, all is a gift from God.[75]

While supporting the methodological naturalism inherent in modern science, the proponents of theistic evolution reject the implication taken by some atheists that this gives credence to ontological materialism. In fact, many modern philosophers of science,[76] including atheists,[77] refer to the long-standing convention in the scientific method that observable events in nature should be explained by natural causes, with the distinction that it does not assume the actual existence or non-existence of the supernatural.

By religion

[edit]

There are also non-Christian forms of creationism,[78] notably Islamic creationism[79] and Hindu creationism.[80]

Bahá'í Faith

[edit]

In the creation myth taught by Bahá'u'lláh, the Bahá'í Faith founder, the universe has "neither beginning nor ending," and that the component elements of the material world have always existed and will always exist.[81] With regard to evolution and the origin of human beings, 'Abdu'l-Bahá gave extensive comments on the subject when he addressed western audiences in the beginning of the 20th century. Transcripts of these comments can be found in Some Answered Questions, Paris Talks and The Promulgation of Universal Peace. 'Abdu'l-Bahá described the human species as having evolved from a primitive form to modern man, but that the capacity to form human intelligence was always in existence.

Buddhism

[edit]

Buddhism denies a creator deity and posits that mundane deities such as Mahabrahma are sometimes misperceived to be a creator.[82] While Buddhism includes belief in divine beings called devas, it holds that they are mortal, limited in their power, and that none of them are creators of the universe.[83] In the Saṃyutta Nikāya, the Buddha also states that the cycle of rebirths stretches back hundreds of thousands of eons, without discernible beginning.[84]

Major Buddhist Indian philosophers such as Nagarjuna, Vasubandhu, Dharmakirti and Buddhaghosa, consistently critiqued Creator God views put forth by Hindu thinkers.[85][86][83]

Christianity

[edit]

As of 2006, most Christians around the world accepted evolution as the most likely explanation for the origins of species, and did not take a literal view of the Genesis creation narrative. The United States is an exception where belief in religious fundamentalism is much more likely to affect attitudes towards evolution than it is for believers elsewhere. Political partisanship affecting religious belief may be a factor because political partisanship in the US is highly correlated with fundamentalist thinking, unlike in Europe.[87]

Most contemporary Christian leaders and scholars from mainstream churches,[88] such as Anglicans[89] and Lutherans,[90] consider that there is no conflict between the spiritual meaning of creation and the science of evolution. According to the former archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, "for most of the history of Christianity, and I think this is fair enough, most of the history of the Christianity there's been an awareness that a belief that everything depends on the creative act of God, is quite compatible with a degree of uncertainty or latitude about how precisely that unfolds in creative time."[91]

Leaders of the Anglican[92] and Roman Catholic[93][c] churches have made statements in favor of evolutionary theory, as have scholars such as the physicist John Polkinghorne, who argues that evolution is one of the principles through which God created living beings. Earlier supporters of evolutionary theory include Frederick Temple, Asa Gray and Charles Kingsley who were enthusiastic supporters of Darwin's theories upon their publication,[94] and the French Jesuit priest and geologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin saw evolution as confirmation of his Christian beliefs, despite condemnation from Church authorities for his more speculative theories. Another example is that of Liberal theology, not providing any creation models, but instead focusing on the symbolism in beliefs of the time of authoring Genesis and the cultural environment.

Many Christians and Jews had been considering the idea of the creation history as an allegory (instead of historical) long before the development of Darwin's theory of evolution. For example, Philo, whose works were taken up by early Church writers, wrote that it would be a mistake to think that creation happened in six days, or in any set amount of time.[95][96] Augustine of the late fourth century who was also a former neoplatonist argued that everything in the universe was created by God at the same moment in time (and not in six days as a literal reading of the Book of Genesis would seem to require);[97] It appears that both Philo and Augustine felt uncomfortable with the idea of a seven-day creation because it detracted from the notion of God's omnipotence. In 1950, Pope Pius XII stated limited support for the idea in his encyclical Humani generis.[98] In 1996, Pope John Paul II stated that "new knowledge has led to the recognition of the theory of evolution as more than a hypothesis," but, referring to previous papal writings, he concluded that "if the human body takes its origin from pre-existent living matter, the spiritual soul is immediately created by God."[99]

In the US, Evangelical Christians have continued to believe in a literal Genesis. As of 2008, members of evangelical Protestant (70%), Mormon (76%) and Jehovah's Witnesses (90%) denominations were the most likely to reject the evolutionary interpretation of the origins of life.[100]

Jehovah's Witnesses assert that scientific evidence about the age of the universe is compatible with the Bible, but that the 'days' after Genesis 1:1 were each thousands of years in length. They view this belief as an alternative to Creationism rather than a variation of Creationism.[101]

The historic Christian literal interpretation of creation requires the harmonization of the two creation stories, Genesis 1:1–2:3[102] and Genesis 2:4–25,[103] for there to be a consistent interpretation.[104][105] They sometimes seek to ensure that their belief is taught in science classes, mainly in American schools. Opponents reject the claim that the literalistic biblical view meets the criteria required to be considered scientific. Many religious groups teach that God created the Cosmos. From the days of the early Christian Church Fathers there were allegorical interpretations of the Book of Genesis as well as literal aspects.[106]

Christian Science, a system of thought and practice derived from the writings of Mary Baker Eddy, interprets the Book of Genesis figuratively rather than literally. It holds that the material world is an illusion, and consequently not created by God: the only real creation is the spiritual realm, of which the material world is a distorted version. Christian Scientists regard the story of the creation in the Book of Genesis as having symbolic rather than literal meaning. According to Christian Science, both creationism and evolution are false from an absolute or "spiritual" point of view, as they both proceed from a (false) belief in the reality of a material universe. However, Christian Scientists do not oppose the teaching of evolution in schools, nor do they demand that alternative accounts be taught: they believe that both material science and literalist theology are concerned with the illusory, mortal and material, rather than the real, immortal and spiritual. With regard to material theories of creation, Eddy showed a preference for Darwin's theory of evolution over others.[107]

Hinduism

[edit]

Hindu creationists claim that species of plants and animals are material forms adopted by pure consciousness which live an endless cycle of births and rebirths.[108] Ronald Numbers says that: "Hindu Creationists have insisted on the antiquity of humans, who they believe appeared fully formed as long, perhaps, as trillions of years ago."[109] Hindu creationism is a form of old Earth creationism, according to Hindu creationists the universe may even be older than billions of years. These views are based on the Vedas, the creation myths of which depict an extreme antiquity of the universe and history of the Earth.[110][111]

In Hindu cosmology, time cyclically repeats general events of creation and destruction, with many "first man", each known as Manu, the progenitor of mankind. Each Manu successively reigns over a 306.72 million year period known as a manvantara, each ending with the destruction of mankind followed by a sandhya (period of non-activity) before the next manvantara. 120.53 million years have elapsed in the current manvantara (current mankind) according to calculations on Hindu units of time.[112][113][114] The universe is cyclically created at the start and destroyed at the end of a kalpa (day of Brahma), lasting for 4.32 billion years, which is followed by a pralaya (period of dissolution) of equal length. 1.97 billion years have elapsed in the current kalpa (current universe). The universal elements or building blocks (unmanifest matter) exists for a period known as a maha-kalpa, lasting for 311.04 trillion years, which is followed by a maha-pralaya (period of great dissolution) of equal length. 155.52 trillion years have elapsed in the current maha-kalpa.[115][116][117]

Islam

[edit]

The creation myths in the Quran are more vague and allow for a wider range of interpretations similar to those in other Abrahamic religions.[10]

Islam also has its own school of theistic evolutionism, which holds that mainstream scientific analysis of the origin of the universe is supported by the Quran. Some Muslims believe in evolutionary creation, especially among liberal movements within Islam.[11]

Writing for The Boston Globe, Drake Bennett noted: "Without a Book of Genesis to account for [...] Muslim creationists have little interest in proving that the age of the Earth is measured in the thousands rather than the billions of years, nor do they show much interest in the problem of the dinosaurs. And the idea that animals might evolve into other animals also tends to be less controversial, in part because there are passages of the Koran that seem to support it. But the issue of whether human beings are the product of evolution is just as fraught among Muslims."[118] Khalid Anees, president of the Islamic Society of Britain, states that Muslims do not agree that one species can develop from another.[119][120]

Ottoman-Lebanese Sunni scholar Hussein al-Jisr, declared that there is no contradiction between evolution and the Islamic scriptures. He stated that "there is no evidence in the Quran to suggest whether all species, each of which exists by the grace of God, were created all at once or gradually", and referred to the aforementioned story of creation in Sūrat al-Anbiyā.[121][122][123][124] In Kemalist Turkey, important scholars strove to accommodate the theory of evolution in Islamic scripture during the first decades of the Turkish Republic; their approach to the theory defended Islamic belief in the face of scientific theories of their times.[125]

The Saudi Arabian government, on the other hand, began funding and promoting denial of evolution in the 1970s in accordance to its Salafi-Wahhabi interpretation of Islam.[126] This stance garnered criticism from the governments and academics of mainline Muslim countries such as Turkey,[127] Pakistan,[128] Lebanon,[129] and Iran,[126] where evolution was initially taught and promoted. Since the 1980s, Turkey has been a site of strong advocacy for creationism, supported by American adherents.[130][131]

Judaism

[edit]

For Orthodox Jews who seek to reconcile discrepancies between science and the creation myths in the Bible, the notion that science and the Bible should even be reconciled through traditional scientific means is questioned. To these groups, science is as true as the Torah and if there seems to be a problem, epistemological limits are to blame for apparently irreconcilable points. They point to discrepancies between what is expected and what actually is to demonstrate that things are not always as they appear.[citation needed] They note that even the root word for 'world' in the Hebrew language, עולם, Olam, means 'hidden' (נעלם, Neh-Eh-Lahm).[citation needed] Just as they know from the Torah that God created man and trees and the light on its way from the stars in their observed state, so too can they know that the world was created in its over the six days of Creation that reflects progression to its currently-observed state, with the understanding that physical ways to verify this may eventually be identified.[citation needed] This knowledge has been advanced by Rabbi Dovid Gottlieb, former philosophy professor at Johns Hopkins University.[citation needed]

Kabbalistic sources from well before the scientifically apparent age of the universe was first determined are also in close concord with modern scientific estimates of the age of the universe, according to Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan, and based on Sefer Temunah, an early kabbalistic work attributed to the first-century Tanna Nehunya ben HaKanah.[citation needed] Many kabbalists accepted the teachings of the Sefer HaTemunah, including the medieval Jewish scholar Nahmanides, his close student Isaac ben Samuel of Acre, and David ben Solomon ibn Abi Zimra. Other parallels are derived, among other sources, from Nahmanides, who expounds that there was a Neanderthal-like species with which Adam mated (he did this long before Neanderthals had even been discovered scientifically).[132][133][134][135] Reform Judaism does not take the Torah as a literal text, but rather as a symbolic or open-ended work.

Some contemporary writers such as Rabbi Gedalyah Nadel have sought to reconcile the discrepancy between the account in the Torah, and scientific findings by arguing that each day referred to in the Bible was not 24 hours, but billions of years long.[136]: 129  Others claim that the Earth was created a few thousand years ago, but was deliberately made to look as if it was five billion years old, e.g. by being created with ready made fossils. The best known exponent of this approach being Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.[136]: 158  Others state that although the world was physically created in six 24-hour days, the Torah accounts can be interpreted to mean that there was a period of billions of years before the six days of creation.[136]: 169, 170 

Native American

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There have been multiple prominent cases of Native Americans rejecting the scientific consensus on the age of the Earth and of the peopling of the Americas in favor of beliefs based on traditional Native American mythology, with the most famous example being Vine Deloria Jr. in his book Red Earth, White Lies.[137][138]

Prevalence

[edit]
Views on human evolution in various countries 2008[139][140]

Most vocal literalist creationists are from the US, and strict creationist views are much less common in other developed countries. According to a study published in Science, a survey of the US, Turkey, Japan and Europe showed that public acceptance of evolution is most prevalent in Iceland, Denmark and Sweden at 80% of the population.[87] There seems to be no significant correlation between believing in evolution and understanding evolutionary science.[141][142]

Australia

[edit]

A 2009 Nielsen poll showed that 23% of Australians believe "the biblical account of human origins," 42% believe in a "wholly scientific" explanation for the origins of life, while 32% believe in an evolutionary process "guided by God".[143][144]

A 2013 survey conducted by Auspoll and the Australian Academy of Science found that 80% of Australians believe in evolution (70% believe it is currently occurring, 10% believe in evolution but do not think it is currently occurring), 12% were not sure and 9% stated they do not believe in evolution.[145]

Brazil

[edit]

A 2011 Ipsos survey found that 47% of responders in Brazil identified themselves as "creationists and believe that human beings were in fact created by a spiritual force such as the God they believe in and do not believe that the origin of man came from evolving from other species such as apes".[146]

In 2004, IBOPE conducted a poll in Brazil that asked questions about creationism and the teaching of creationism in schools. When asked if creationism should be taught in schools, 89% of people said that creationism should be taught in schools. When asked if the teaching of creationism should replace the teaching of evolution in schools, 75% of people said that the teaching of creationism should replace the teaching of evolution in schools.[147][148]

Canada

[edit]
Big Valley Creation Science Museum in Big Valley, Alberta, Canada

A 2012 survey, by Angus Reid Public Opinion revealed that 61 percent of Canadians believe in evolution. The poll asked "Where did human beings come from – did we start as singular cells millions of year ago and evolve into our present form, or did God create us in his image 10,000 years ago?"[149]

In 2019, a Research Co. poll asked people in Canada if creationism "should be part of the school curriculum in their province". 38% of Canadians said that creationism should be part of the school curriculum, 39% of Canadians said that it should not be part of the school curriculum, and 23% of Canadians were undecided.[150]

In 2023, a Research Co. poll found that 21% of Canadians "believe God created human beings in their present form within the last 10,000 years". The poll also found that "More than two-in-five Canadians (43%) think creationism should be part of the school curriculum in their province."[151]

Europe

[edit]

In Europe, literalist creationism is more widely rejected, though regular opinion polls are not available. Most people accept that evolution is the most widely accepted scientific theory as taught in most schools. In countries with a Roman Catholic majority, papal acceptance of evolutionary creationism as worthy of study has essentially ended debate on the matter for many people.

In the UK, a 2006 poll on the "origin and development of life", asked participants to choose between three different perspectives on the origin of life: 22% chose creationism, 17% opted for intelligent design, 48% selected evolutionary theory, and the rest did not know.[152][153] A subsequent 2010 YouGov poll on the correct explanation for the origin of humans found that 9% opted for creationism, 12% intelligent design, 65% evolutionary theory and 13% didn't know.[154] The former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, head of the worldwide Anglican Communion, views the idea of teaching creationism in schools as a mistake.[155] In 2009, an Ipsos Mori survey in the United Kingdom found that 54% of Britons agreed with the view: "Evolutionary theories should be taught in science lessons in schools together with other possible perspectives, such as intelligent design and creationism."[156]

In Italy, Education Minister Letizia Moratti wanted to retire evolution from the secondary school level; after one week of massive protests, she reversed her opinion.[157][158]

There continues to be scattered and possibly mounting efforts on the part of religious groups throughout Europe to introduce creationism into public education.[159] In response, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has released a draft report titled The dangers of creationism in education on June 8, 2007,[160] reinforced by a further proposal of banning it in schools dated October 4, 2007.[161]

Serbia suspended the teaching of evolution for one week in September 2004, under education minister Ljiljana Čolić, only allowing schools to reintroduce evolution into the curriculum if they also taught creationism.[162] "After a deluge of protest from scientists, teachers and opposition parties" says the BBC report, Čolić's deputy made the statement, "I have come here to confirm Charles Darwin is still alive" and announced that the decision was reversed.[163] Čolić resigned after the government said that she had caused "problems that had started to reflect on the work of the entire government."[164]

Poland saw a major controversy over creationism in 2006, when the Deputy Education Minister, Mirosław Orzechowski, denounced evolution as "one of many lies" taught in Polish schools. His superior, Minister of Education Roman Giertych, has stated that the theory of evolution would continue to be taught in Polish schools, "as long as most scientists in our country say that it is the right theory." Giertych's father, Member of the European Parliament Maciej Giertych, has opposed the teaching of evolution and has claimed that dinosaurs and humans co-existed.[165]

A June 2015 – July 2016 Pew poll of Eastern European countries, found that 56% of people from Armenia say that humans and other living things have "Existed in present state since the beginning of time". Armenia is followed by 52% from Bosnia, 42% from Moldova, 37% from Lithuania, 34% from Georgia and Ukraine, 33% from Croatia and Romania, 31% from Bulgaria, 29% from Greece and Serbia, 26% from Russia, 25% from Latvia, 23% from Belarus and Poland, 21% from Estonia and Hungary, and 16% from the Czech Republic.[166]

South Africa

[edit]

A 2011 Ipsos survey found that 56% of responders in South Africa identified themselves as "creationists and believe that human beings were in fact created by a spiritual force such as the God they believe in and do not believe that the origin of man came from evolving from other species such as apes".[146]

South Korea

[edit]

In 2009, an EBS survey in South Korea found that 63% of people believed that creation and evolution should both be taught in schools simultaneously.[167]

United States

[edit]
The Ark Encounter theme park in Williamstown, Kentucky, United States
Glendive Dinosaur and Fossil Museum in Glendive, Montana, United States
Anti-evolution car in Athens, Georgia

A 2017 poll by Pew Research found that 62% of Americans believe humans have evolved over time and 34% of Americans believe humans and other living things have existed in their present form since the beginning of time.[168] A 2019 Gallup creationism survey found that 40% of adults in the United States inclined to the view that "God created humans in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years" when asked for their views on the origin and development of human beings.[169]

According to a 2014 Gallup poll,[170] about 42% of Americans believe that "God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so."[170] Another 31% believe that "human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God guided this process,"and 19% believe that "human beings have developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God had no part in this process."[170]

Belief in creationism is inversely correlated to education; of those with postgraduate degrees, 74% accept evolution.[171][172] In 1987, Newsweek reported: "By one count there are some 700 scientists with respectable academic credentials (out of a total of 480,000 U.S. earth and life scientists) who give credence to creation-science, the general theory that complex life forms did not evolve but appeared 'abruptly.'"[172][173]

A 2000 poll for People for the American Way found 70% of the US public felt that evolution was compatible with a belief in God.[174]

According to a study published in Science, between 1985 and 2005 the number of adult North Americans who accept evolution declined from 45% to 40%, the number of adults who reject evolution declined from 48% to 39% and the number of people who were unsure increased from 7% to 21%. Besides the US the study also compared data from 32 European countries, Turkey, and Japan. The only country where acceptance of evolution was lower than in the US was Turkey (25%).[87]

According to a 2011 Fox News poll, 45% of Americans believe in creationism, down from 50% in a similar poll in 1999.[175] 21% believe in 'the theory of evolution as outlined by Darwin and other scientists' (up from 15% in 1999), and 27% answered that both are true (up from 26% in 1999).[175]

In September 2012, educator and television personality Bill Nye spoke with the Associated Press and aired his fears about acceptance of creationism, believing that teaching children that creationism is the only true answer without letting them understand the way science works will prevent any future innovation in the world of science.[176][177][178] In February 2014, Nye defended evolution in the classroom in a debate with creationist Ken Ham on the topic of whether creation is a viable model of origins in today's modern, scientific era.[179][180][181]

Education controversies

[edit]
The Truth fish, one of the many creationist responses to the Darwin fish

In the US, creationism has become centered in the political controversy over creation and evolution in public education, and whether teaching creationism in science classes conflicts with the separation of church and state. Currently, the controversy comes in the form of whether advocates of the intelligent design movement who wish to "Teach the Controversy" in science classes have conflated science with religion.[52]

People for the American Way polled 1500 North Americans about the teaching of evolution and creationism in November and December 1999. They found that most North Americans were not familiar with creationism, and most North Americans had heard of evolution, but many did not fully understand the basics of the theory. The main findings were:

Americans believe that:[174]
  • Public schools should teach evolution only
20%
  • Only evolution should be taught in science classes, religious explanations
    can be discussed in another class
17%
  • Creationism can be discussed in science class as a 'belief,' not a scientific theory
29%
  • Creationism and evolution should be taught as 'scientific theories' in science class
13%
  • Only Creationism should be taught
16%
  • Teach both evolution and Creationism, but unsure how to do so
4%
  • No opinion
1%

In such political contexts, creationists argue that their particular religiously based origin belief is superior to those of other belief systems, in particular those made through secular or scientific rationale. Political creationists are opposed by many individuals and organizations who have made detailed critiques and given testimony in various court cases that the alternatives to scientific reasoning offered by creationists are opposed by the consensus of the scientific community.[182][183]

Criticism

[edit]

Christian criticism

[edit]

Most Christians disagree with the teaching of creationism as an alternative to evolution in schools.[184][185][186] Several religious organizations, among them the Catholic Church, hold that their faith does not conflict with the scientific consensus regarding evolution.[187] The Clergy Letter Project, which has collected more than 13,000 signatures, is an "endeavor designed to demonstrate that religion and science can be compatible."

In his 2002 article "Intelligent Design as a Theological Problem", George Murphy argues against the view that life on Earth, in all its forms, is direct evidence of God's act of creation (Murphy quotes Phillip E. Johnson's claim that he is speaking "of a God who acted openly and left his fingerprints on all the evidence."). Murphy argues that this view of God is incompatible with the Christian understanding of God as "the one revealed in the cross and resurrection of Christ." The basis of this theology is Isaiah 45:15, "Verily thou art a God that hidest thyself, O God of Israel, the Saviour."

Murphy observes that the execution of a Jewish carpenter by Roman authorities is in and of itself an ordinary event and did not require divine action. On the contrary, for the crucifixion to occur, God had to limit or "empty" himself. It was for this reason that Paul the Apostle wrote, in Philippians 2:5-8:

Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.

Murphy concludes that,

Just as the Son of God limited himself by taking human form and dying on a cross, God limits divine action in the world to be in accord with rational laws which God has chosen. This enables us to understand the world on its own terms, but it also means that natural processes hide God from scientific observation.

For Murphy, a theology of the cross requires that Christians accept a methodological naturalism, meaning that one cannot invoke God to explain natural phenomena, while recognizing that such acceptance does not require one to accept a metaphysical naturalism, which proposes that nature is all that there is.[188]

The Jesuit priest George Coyne has stated that it is "unfortunate that, especially here in America, creationism has come to mean...some literal interpretation of Genesis." He argues that "...Judaic-Christian faith is radically creationist, but in a totally different sense. It is rooted in belief that everything depends on God, or better, all is a gift from God."[189]

Teaching of creationism

[edit]

Other Christians have expressed qualms about teaching creationism. In March 2006, then Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the leader of the world's Anglicans, stated his discomfort about teaching creationism, saying that creationism was "a kind of category mistake, as if the Bible were a theory like other theories." He also said: "My worry is creationism can end up reducing the doctrine of creation rather than enhancing it." The views of the Episcopal Church – a major American-based branch of the Anglican Communion – on teaching creationism resemble those of Williams.[155]

The National Science Teachers Association is opposed to teaching creationism as a science,[190] as is the Association for Science Teacher Education,[191] the National Association of Biology Teachers,[192] the American Anthropological Association,[193] the American Geosciences Institute,[194] the Geological Society of America,[195] the American Geophysical Union,[196] and numerous other professional teaching and scientific societies.

In April 2010, the American Academy of Religion issued Guidelines for Teaching About Religion in K‐12 Public Schools in the United States, which included guidance that creation science or intelligent design should not be taught in science classes, as "Creation science and intelligent design represent worldviews that fall outside of the realm of science that is defined as (and limited to) a method of inquiry based on gathering observable and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning." However, they, as well as other "worldviews that focus on speculation regarding the origins of life represent another important and relevant form of human inquiry that is appropriately studied in literature or social sciences courses. Such study, however, must include a diversity of worldviews representing a variety of religious and philosophical perspectives and must avoid privileging one view as more legitimate than others."[197]

Randy Moore and Sehoya Cotner, from the biology program at the University of Minnesota, reflect on the relevance of teaching creationism in the article "The Creationist Down the Hall: Does It Matter When Teachers Teach Creationism?", in which they write: "Despite decades of science education reform, numerous legal decisions declaring the teaching of creationism in public-school science classes to be unconstitutional, overwhelming evidence supporting evolution, and the many denunciations of creationism as nonscientific by professional scientific societies, creationism remains popular throughout the United States."[198]

Scientific criticism

[edit]

Science is a system of knowledge based on observation, empirical evidence, and the development of theories that yield testable explanations and predictions of natural phenomena. By contrast, creationism is often based on literal interpretations of the narratives of particular religious texts.[199] Creationist beliefs involve purported forces that lie outside of nature, such as supernatural intervention, and often do not allow predictions at all. Therefore, these can neither be confirmed nor disproved by scientists.[200] However, many creationist beliefs can be framed as testable predictions about phenomena such as the age of the Earth, its geological history and the origins, distributions and relationships of living organisms found on it. Early science incorporated elements of these beliefs, but as science developed, these beliefs were gradually falsified and were replaced with understandings based on accumulated and reproducible evidence that often allows the accurate prediction of future results.[201][202]

Some scientists, such as Stephen Jay Gould,[203] consider science and religion to be two compatible and complementary fields, with authorities in distinct areas of human experience, so-called non-overlapping magisteria.[204] This view is also held by many theologians, who believe that ultimate origins and meaning are addressed by religion, but favor verifiable scientific explanations of natural phenomena over those of creationist beliefs. Other scientists, such as Richard Dawkins,[205] reject the non-overlapping magisteria and argue that, in disproving literal interpretations of creationists, the scientific method also undermines religious texts as a source of truth. Irrespective of this diversity in viewpoints, since creationist beliefs are not supported by empirical evidence, the scientific consensus is that any attempt to teach creationism as science should be rejected.[206][207][208]

Organizations

[edit]
Creationism (in general)
Young Earth creationism
Old Earth creationism
Intelligent design
Evolutionary creationism

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Creationism is the religious belief that the universe, Earth, life, and humanity originated through direct acts of divine creation, typically interpreted from literal readings of the Bible's Book of Genesis, positing a supernatural creator who formed all things ex nihilo in a structured sequence. This doctrine emphasizes a purposeful intelligent design underlying biological complexity and cosmic order, contrasting with naturalistic explanations that rely solely on unguided processes. Variants of creationism include , which asserts a recent origin approximately 6,000–10,000 years ago over six literal 24-hour days, rejecting and geological evidence as incompatible with scriptural chronology. accommodates longer timescales, interpreting Genesis "days" as extended periods or incorporating gap theories, while still affirming of kinds rather than . , a modern offshoot, focuses on empirical detection of design in and specified information in biological systems, without necessarily invoking . Historically, creationism gained prominence in response to Charles Darwin's 1859 , evolving from broad theistic acceptance of divine origins to organized "" efforts in the , such as the Institute for Creation Research founded in 1970 to promote scientific evidences for biblical creation. Key controversies center on public education, exemplified by legal challenges like the 1925 and subsequent rulings deeming creationism non-scientific, culminating in the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision barring "" from curricula due to its religious motivation. The overwhelmingly rejects creationism as a valid explanatory framework, citing empirical data from , , and cosmology supporting evolutionary theory and a 13.8-billion-year-old , viewing creationist claims as unfalsifiable and dependent on rather than testable predictions. Despite institutional biases in academia favoring materialistic paradigms, the absence of transitional forms predicted by creationism and the predictive success of evolutionary models underscore the causal disconnect between creationist assertions and observable evidence. Creationism persists through organizations like , which operate museums and attractions such as the to disseminate its views.

Core Concepts and Foundations

Defining Creationism

Creationism is the doctrine that the , , forms, and humanity originated through direct acts of divine creation by , rather than through undirected naturalistic processes such as . This belief posits creation ex nihilo—out of nothing—by an omnipotent deity exercising , excluding gradual development from simpler forms via natural mechanisms. Proponents, particularly within Abrahamic traditions, ground this view in scriptural accounts, emphasizing God's intentional design and instantaneous or short-term creative fiat over billions of years of probabilistic change. In its broadest theological sense, creationism affirms as the absolute originator of all matter, space, and biological kinds in their essential current forms, contrasting with materialistic origins models that invoke unguided chemical and biological from a primordial singularity or . While often linked to literal interpretations of Genesis—depicting creation in six 24-hour days followed by a rest—creationism encompasses views rejecting macroevolutionary transformations between distinct created kinds (baramin). Narrowly, the term frequently denotes opposition to Darwinian , asserting empirical gaps in the record and in cellular mechanisms as evidence against common ancestry. Creationism differs from or theistic evolution, which allow secondary natural causes post-initial creation or integrate evolutionary processes under divine oversight; strict creationism insists on primary, non-redundant divine intervention without reliance on or stochastic variation for kind-to-kind changes. This framework prioritizes historical divine testimony over uniformitarian assumptions in and , viewing the created order as reflecting teleological purpose rather than contingency.

Scriptural and Philosophical Bases

The scriptural foundations of creationism primarily derive from the Genesis account in the Hebrew Bible, which posits that God created the universe ex nihilo through direct, intentional acts. Genesis 1:1 declares, "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth," establishing divine origination as the initiating cause, followed by a structured sequence of creation over six days, culminating in the formation of humanity on the sixth day. Specifically, God created Adam and Eve as the first humans in His image (Genesis 1:26-27), constituting the original human couple from which all humanity descends via monogenism. This narrative emphasizes God's sovereignty, verbal fiat ("And God said"), and purposeful ordering of creation, rejecting naturalistic emergence in favor of supernatural causation, with no physical death, suffering, or carnivorism existing prior to the Original Sin introduced by disobedience at the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (Genesis 3), which precipitated the Fall, expulsion from Eden, and associated curses. These events underpin doctrines such as original sin and the necessity of redemption, while affirming that biological and cosmic complexity reflects intentional divine design rather than unguided processes. These scriptural texts underpin creationist interpretations by asserting a recent, literal timeline and of kinds, as evidenced in Genesis 1:24-25, where creates living creatures "after their kind," implying fixed boundaries incompatible with gradual macroevolutionary change. Proponents argue that such passages demand a historical reading, supported by internal biblical consistency, including affirmations like Exodus 20:11, which parallels the creation week with the commandment. While analogous creation motifs appear in other Abrahamic texts, such as the Quran's descriptions of forming the heavens and earth in six periods ( 7:54), Christian creationism centers on the inerrancy and historicity of Genesis as foundational to doctrines of and redemption. Philosophically, creationism rests on arguments demonstrating the necessity of an intelligent first cause, including Thomas Aquinas's Five Ways in the Summa Theologica, which infer God's from motion, causation, contingency, degrees of perfection, and in nature. Aquinas's , for instance, posits that contingent beings require a necessary being to account for their , aligning with creation ex nihilo as an instantaneous emanation of all being from divine will, rather than eternal or evolutionary processes. This causal realism underscores that observed order cannot arise from undirected material causes, demanding an uncaused creator whose intellect imposes finality on the universe. A key teleological argument is William Paley's watchmaker analogy from Natural Theology (1802), which compares the intricate functionality of a watch—evidencing contrivance—to biological organisms, concluding that such specified complexity necessitates an intelligent artificer over chance assembly. Paley contends that the adaptation of means to ends in nature, like the eye's optical precision, mirrors human artifacts and thus implies design, countering mechanistic philosophies by highlighting improbability of self-organization without purpose. These arguments, rooted in empirical observation of order and contingency, provide a rational basis for rejecting purely materialistic accounts, privileging a creator whose agency explains cosmic fine-tuning and life's information-rich structures.

Distinction from Evolutionary Theories

Creationism fundamentally differs from evolutionary theories in its reliance on supernatural causation rather than unguided natural processes to account for the origin and diversification of life. Proponents of creationism maintain that a divine directly formed complex organisms and in their essential kinds, often interpreting this as instantaneous or rapid acts of creation without intermediary forms, as described in religious texts like the Genesis account. In opposition, Darwinian , as articulated in Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859), posits that biological diversity arises through descent with modification from common ancestors, driven by mechanisms such as random genetic variations and favoring traits that enhance survival and reproduction in specific environments. This mechanistic divergence extends to the scope of : creationism addresses ultimate origins, including the initial appearance of itself, through deliberate intelligent acts, rejecting purely materialistic or gradual emergence from non-life. Evolutionary , by contrast, primarily explains subsequent changes in populations over geological time scales—typically millions to billions of years—via observable processes like and differential reproduction, without invoking intervention, though it remains agnostic or separate on life's initial origin. Creationism often constrains variation to within fixed "kinds" (), denying large-scale transformations or universal common ancestry, whereas asserts a branching encompassing all organisms from a single prokaryotic progenitor. Empirically, these views clash on evidential interpretation; creationism interprets discontinuities in the fossil record or biochemical complexity as of distinct creations, while evolutionary frameworks view transitional forms, genetic homologies, and adaptive radiations as supporting gradual, selection-driven change. Such distinctions underscore creationism's foundation in theological presuppositions over methodological naturalism, rendering it non-falsifiable in scientific terms since agency eludes repeatable experimentation.

Historical Evolution

Ancient and Pre-Scientific Interpretations

Ancient civilizations across , , and the developed cosmogonies attributing the origins of the to divine actions emerging from primordial chaos. The Babylonian , composed around the 18th to 12th centuries BCE, depicts the god slaying the chaos monster and fashioning the heavens and earth from her divided body, establishing order through conflict among elder deities. Similarly, Egyptian creation accounts, such as the Heliopolitan tradition from (c. 2686–2181 BCE), describe the god self-generating on a amid the Nun waters of chaos and producing the first gods Shu and through masturbation or speech, thereby initiating the structured world. These narratives emphasize separation of elements—sky from earth, light from dark—as acts of divine imposition on undifferentiated matter, reflecting a cyclical view of order periodically reasserted against chaos. The Hebrew account in Genesis 1–2, rooted in traditions predating its redaction (likely 6th–5th centuries BCE during the ), diverges by portraying a singular, transcendent creating through speech alone over six days, without primordial conflict or pre-existing materials, implying creation ex nihilo. While sharing motifs like sequential ordering (e.g., separation of waters, formation of dry land), Genesis subordinates cosmic elements to divine fiat, rejecting polytheistic generational strife and emphasizing purposeful design for human stewardship. In , Hesiod's (c. 700 BCE) traces origins from Chaos birthing (earth), , and Eros, followed by generational divine wars culminating in Zeus's ordered pantheon. Plato's Timaeus (c. 360 BCE) introduces a craftsman-like organizing eternal, chaotic matter into a harmonious modeled on ideal Forms, blending teleological purpose with pre-existent substrate. Pre-scientific interpreters in the patristic era (2nd–5th centuries CE) largely affirmed divine creation via biblical texts but varied in literalism. of (c. 185–253 CE) advocated allegorical readings of Genesis's days as non-chronological stages of divine reason, avoiding anthropomorphic conflicts with observed antiquity. (354–430 CE) concurred, positing instantaneous creation with "days" denoting logical distinctions in God's eternal act, critiquing overly literal young-earth chronologies as philosophically untenable given scriptural ambiguities and natural evidence like seed germination timelines. Basil the Great (c. 329–379 CE), in his Hexaemeron homilies, defended a more sequential literalism while integrating empirical observations of , such as bird migrations and geological layers, as confirmatory of providential order rather than evolutionary happenstance. These views prioritized scriptural harmony with reason and observation, prefiguring tensions with later mechanistic while upholding causal primacy of a willful intelligence over undirected processes.

Modern Revival and Key Milestones

Following the 1925 , which portrayed creationists negatively in media coverage and led to a public retreat from anti-evolution advocacy, organized creationism in the United States experienced a period of dormancy. Evangelical focus shifted away from scientific defenses of biblical accounts, with many adopting compromise positions like day-age interpretations to reconcile scripture with geological . The modern revival commenced with the 1961 publication of : The Biblical Record and Its Scientific Implications by John C. Whitcomb Jr., a theologian, and , a hydraulic engineer. The book argued for a recent global flood as the primary mechanism explaining geological strata and fossils, integrating with purported scientific evidence against uniformitarian and evolutionary timelines. Widely regarded as the foundational text of contemporary young-earth creationism, it sold over 100,000 copies by the 1980s and catalyzed a resurgence by equipping proponents with technical arguments. In response to the book's influence, creationists established formal organizations to advance research and education. The Creation Research Society formed in 1963, comprising scientists committed to investigating creation models empirically. Morris founded the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in 1970, initially as a branch of the American Scientific Affiliation before becoming independent, to conduct and disseminate . These groups produced peer-reviewed journals, textbooks, and seminars, fostering a network that extended beyond the U.S. to international affiliates. Key legal and cultural milestones followed, including state-level "balanced treatment" laws in the 1980s requiring equal classroom time for and , though invalidated by the 1987 U.S. ruling in Edwards v. . The revival's momentum persisted through publications like Morris's 1974 Scientific Creationism, which adapted arguments for public school use, and ongoing debates highlighting perceived weaknesses in evolutionary . By the late , the movement had influenced millions via books, conferences, and media, attributing its growth to rigorous biblical and scientific scrutiny over institutional evolutionary orthodoxy.

20th-21st Century Developments

Following the 1925 , public advocacy for biblical creationism in U.S. schools declined amid widespread media portrayal of fundamentalists as anti-intellectual, though private belief persisted among many evangelicals. A revival began in the with the publication of in 1961 by hydraulic engineer and theologian John C. Whitcomb, which argued for a young Earth and global flood based on reinterpretations of geological data through a literal reading of Genesis. This work, selling over 100,000 copies by the 1970s, spurred the modern young-Earth creationist movement by framing creationism as compatible with empirical science, emphasizing to explain fossils and strata. In 1970, Morris established the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) as a research arm of Christian Heritage College in Santee, California, to conduct and disseminate scientific studies supporting creationism, including critiques of evolutionary mechanisms and radiometric dating. ICR's efforts contributed to "creation science" curricula proposed for public schools in states like Arkansas and Louisiana during the 1970s and 1980s, positing testable hypotheses such as rapid sedimentation during Noah's Flood. However, the U.S. Supreme Court in Edwards v. Aguillard (1987) struck down Louisiana's Balanced Treatment Act, ruling it advanced religious doctrine under the guise of science, effectively barring creation science from public education. The (ID) movement emerged in the late and 1990s as a response, led by figures like philosopher , whose 1991 book Darwin on Trial critiqued Darwinism's philosophical assumptions without direct biblical appeals. Proponents, including biochemist with his 1996 introducing "," argued that certain biological systems imply an intelligent cause, positioning ID as a secular from data like . The Discovery Institute's formalized this in 1996, funding research and publications. A pivotal setback occurred in the 2005 Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District federal trial, where plaintiffs challenged a district's policy requiring disclaimers on and references to ID's . U.S. District Judge ruled ID non-scientific, citing expert testimony that it lacked and relied on supernatural implications, violating the Establishment Clause. Despite the 139-page decision affirming 's evidentiary basis, ID advocates maintained it addressed gaps in Darwinian theory, such as discontinuities. Into the 21st century, organizations like (AiG), founded in 1994 by , expanded outreach through media, conferences, and attractions. AiG opened the in 2007 and the full-scale in 2016, drawing over 2 million visitors by 2020 to exhibits depicting a 6,000-year-old and human-dinosaur coexistence. These sites aim to counter secular narratives with models of pre-Flood and genetic bottlenecks, while ICR established the ICR Discovery Center in 2019. Legal barriers persist, yet surveys indicate sustained support: a 2024 Gallup poll found 37% of Americans affirm recent of humans, reflecting cultural resilience amid academic dominance of evolutionary paradigms. Creationist literature continues to evolve, incorporating and cosmology critiques, though mainstream scientific bodies, often critiqued for institutional biases favoring naturalism, dismiss these as non-parsimonious.

Variants and Interpretations

Young Earth Creationism

Young Earth creationism (YEC) holds that created the , , and all in six literal 24-hour days approximately 6,000 years ago, followed by a global Noachian flood that reshaped the planet's around 4,350–4,500 years ago. This timeline derives primarily from a literal reading of biblical genealogies in Genesis 5 and 11, extrapolated backward from known historical events like the division of and Judah in 975 BC. In the , Irish Archbishop refined this chronology in his Annals of the World (1650), pinpointing creation to the night preceding October 23, 4004 BC, a calculation still referenced by many YEC proponents despite minor variances in Hebrew textual traditions. The modern YEC movement gained traction with the 1961 publication of by John C. Whitcomb Jr. and hydraulic engineer , which synthesized with arguments for "" to explain sedimentary layers, fossils, and landforms as products of rapid, catastrophic deposition rather than uniformitarian processes over eons. Morris founded the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) in 1970 as a research arm initially under Christian Heritage College, focusing on empirical challenges to old-Earth dating methods and evolutionary timelines. Similarly, Australian established (AiG) in the United States in 1994 (with roots in the 1970s Creation Science Foundation), emphasizing , education, and attractions like the (opened 2007) and (opened 2016) to promote YEC narratives. YEC distinguishes itself from other creationist views by rejecting day-age, gap, or framework interpretations of Genesis 1, insisting on ordinary solar days bounded by "evening and morning" phrases and the Hebrew yom typically denoting 24 hours in historical contexts. Proponents argue this framework aligns with observable data reinterpreted through biblical presuppositions, citing phenomena like carbon-14 traces in diamonds and coal (suggesting insufficient time for complete decay), soft tissues and biomolecules preserved in bones (e.g., Mary Schweitzer's 2005 Tyrannosaurus rex find, claimed undecayed after 68 million years), and rapid human fitting a post-flood exponential model from eight survivors rather than billions of years. Geological claims include polystrate fossils (trees spanning multiple strata, implying quick burial), tightly folded rock layers without fractures (attributed to soft, wet from the rather than brittle ancient rock), and insufficient seafloor accumulation (measured at million years' worth at current rates, far short of billions). Astronomical arguments invoke the Moon's recession rate (4 cm/year, extrapolating to contact with in under 1.5 million years if uniform), short-period comets lacking observed Oort clouds as replenishment sources, and spiral galaxies' tight windings defying billions of years without external . YEC organizations like ICR and AiG maintain research programs, such as the RATE project (2000–2005), which tested accelerated nuclear decay rates during the creation week or to reconcile excess in zircons and radioisotope discrepancies, though these remain contested interpretations of raw data. YEC emphasizes epistemological priority of Scripture over autonomous science, viewing old-Earth uniformitarianism as philosophically rooted in anti-supernaturalism rather than neutral empiricism, a stance formalized in Morris's scientific creationism to counter Darwinian narratives in public education post-Scopes Trial (1925). Adherents, numbering in the millions globally (e.g., surveys indicate 40% of Americans affirm a 10,000-year-old Earth as of 2019), operate museums, schools, and journals to disseminate these views, often framing empirical anomalies as confirmatory while attributing mainstream consensus to worldview bias.

Old Earth Creationism

Old Earth creationism (OEC) posits that the and are billions of years old, aligning with mainstream scientific estimates of approximately 13.8 billion years for the universe and 4.54 billion years for , while asserting that supernaturally intervened to create distinct biological kinds progressively over time rather than through undirected evolutionary processes. Unlike , OEC rejects a literal 24-hour interpretation of the Genesis creation days, instead viewing them as extended epochs or periods that correspond to major stages in cosmic and geological history, such as the day-age theory or framework interpretations that emphasize theological rather than chronological sequence. Adherents maintain that special creation events occurred at various points in Earth's history, with forming basic types of plants, animals, and humans separately, without between major groups. Prominent proponents include astrophysicist Hugh Ross, who founded in 1986 to advocate for this progressive creation model, arguing that scientific data from cosmology, , and corroborate biblical accounts when properly interpreted. Ross's framework, detailed in works like Creation and Time (1994), emphasizes God's dual revelation through Scripture and nature, where empirical evidence such as of rocks and radiation supports an ancient without necessitating Darwinian for life's diversity. Earlier figures like theologian in the 19th century also endorsed old Earth views, reconciling emerging geological data with Scripture by allowing for non-literal days, though modern OEC distinguishes itself by integrating astrophysical evidence for cosmology as fulfillment of Genesis 1:1. OEC differs fundamentally from in accepting uniformitarian geological processes and rejecting a global as the primary shaper of 's topography, instead attributing features like the Grand Canyon to long-term over millions of years. Proponents cite evidence such as uranium-lead dating of crystals yielding ages up to 4.4 billion years and stratigraphic sequences showing gradual faunal succession as compatible with divine progressive acts, while critiquing for lacking transitional fossils between higher taxa. Critics from young Earth perspectives, such as those at , argue that OEC compromises by accommodating secular dating methods, which they claim rely on unproven assumptions about decay rates and initial conditions. Nonetheless, OEC advocates counter that denying old Earth data contradicts observable stellar distances—measured via and at up to 13 billion light-years—and undermines Christianity's credibility in scientific discourse. In terms of human origins, OEC holds that Homo sapiens appeared abruptly around 50,000–150,000 years ago via direct divine creation, interpreting fossil evidence like Homo habilis and Neanderthals as either extinct non-human hominids or deformed modern humans rather than evolutionary ancestors. This view gained traction in the late 20th century amid debates over radiocarbon and potassium-argon dating, with organizations like Reasons to Believe publishing peer-reviewed critiques of evolutionary timelines, such as challenges to alleged human-chimp genetic similarities based on orphan gene discoveries in vertebrate genomes. While less politically active than young Earth groups in U.S. education controversies, OEC influences evangelical apologetics by promoting testability of creation models against empirical data, as seen in Ross's predictions of habitable exoplanets confirmed by Kepler telescope observations starting in 2011.

Intelligent Design and Neo-Creationism

(ID) posits that specified features of the universe and biological organisms exhibit patterns best accounted for by an rather than undirected natural processes such as acting on random mutations. This view emerged prominently in the as a response to legal restrictions on teaching biblical creationism in public schools, following the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision in that invalidated "" mandates. Key proponents include biochemist , who in his 1996 book introduced the concept of , arguing that certain , like the bacterial , require all components simultaneously for function and thus cannot arise through gradual evolutionary increments. William Dembski further developed ID through the mathematical criterion of specified complexity, contending that arrangements exhibiting both high complexity and independent specificity—such as the DNA code—reliably indicate design, drawing analogies from information theory and archaeology where chance or necessity fails to explain such patterns. The Discovery Institute, a think tank in Seattle, has been central to ID's promotion since 1996 via its Center for Science and Culture, advocating a "wedge strategy" outlined in an internal 1998 planning document to challenge materialistic science through research, publicity, and policy influence aimed at renewing culture with theistic implications. Neo-creationism refers to efforts to reframe creationist ideas in non-sectarian, empirically oriented language to evade constitutional barriers, with ID often characterized by critics as its flagship example due to shared goals of inferring purposeful agency in nature while minimizing explicit religious references. Proponents of ID maintain it constitutes a scientific research program testable via empirical detection of design signatures, independent of particular religious doctrines, though courts have disagreed; in the 2005 Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District case, U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III ruled that ID fails scientific criteria like falsifiability and peer-reviewed support, deeming it a form of creationism advancing religious objectives in violation of the Establishment Clause. Scientific reception of ID remains overwhelmingly negative, with mainstream bodies like the asserting it lacks novel predictions or empirical mechanisms distinguishing design from , often critiquing claims as refuted by evidence of stepwise evolutionary co-option in systems like the or blood clotting cascade. ID advocates counter that institutional resistance stems from philosophical commitment to methodological naturalism, which precludes non-material causes a priori, potentially overlooking evidence of fine-tuning in cosmological constants or biological . Despite this, ID publications have appeared in outlets like the peer-reviewed Protein Science journal on topics such as challenges to , though broader acceptance eludes the paradigm.

Fringe and Esoteric Forms

The Omphalos hypothesis posits that the universe was created by God with built-in appearances of age and history, including geological strata, fossils, and cosmic light from distant stars already en route to Earth, to ensure immediate functionality despite a recent origin. Formulated by British naturalist Philip Henry Gosse in his 1857 book Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot, the theory reconciles young Earth timelines with empirical observations by arguing that divine creation inherently includes "prochronic" effects—events that never occurred but appear to have. Mainstream creationist organizations, such as Answers in Genesis, criticize it for implying potential divine deception, rendering scientific evidence unreliable for distinguishing true history from fabricated maturity. The vapor canopy theory, once proposed to explain the , suggests a pre-deluge envelope of or crystalline encircling , providing a for longevity and collapsing to supply floodwaters. Advanced in the mid-20th century by figures like Henry Morris in (1961), it aimed to account for biblical references to "waters above the " (Genesis 1:7). However, thermodynamic calculations indicate such a canopy would generate lethal exceeding 600 psi and temperatures over 200°C upon , leading major young Earth groups like the Institute for Creation Research to abandon it by the 1980s in favor of subterranean water sources for the flood. Geocentrism, the belief that remains stationary at the universe's center with the sun and orbiting daily, persists among a minority of biblical literalists interpreting verses like Psalm 93:1 ("the world is established, so it cannot be moved"). Proponents, including the Galilean Society founded in 1989, cite Joshua 10:12–13 (sun standing still) as literal evidence against . Yet, empirical data from , planetary retrogrades, and confirm 's rotation and orbit, prompting organizations like to deem geocentrism unnecessary and distracting from core creationist claims, as it contradicts observable mechanics without advancing biblical . Pre-Adamism asserts the existence of human populations prior to , often invoking Genesis 1:26–28 as a separate creation event from in Genesis 2, to explain fossil records or human diversity. Originating in 17th-century works like Isaac La Peyrère's Prae-Adamitae (1655), which posited non-Adamite races for non-Semitic peoples, it has been invoked by some to reconcile old geology but lacks direct biblical warrant and introduces theological issues like death before . Young Earth creationists reject it, arguing as the federal head of all humanity (Romans 5:12), while its historical ties to racial hierarchies undermine its credibility. The doctrine, a dual-seedline interpretation, claims engaged in sexual relations with the serpent (), producing as the progenitor of a satanic lineage persisting today, contrasting with Abel's godly seed from . Traced to medieval Jewish midrashim and revived in 20th-century fringe groups like William Branham's followers and sects, it relies on allegorizing Genesis 3:15 ("enmity between thy seed and her seed"). Orthodox theologians dismiss it as , citing no Hebrew textual support for sexual sin in Eden and its contradiction with as disobedience alone (Romans 5:19); its association with antisemitic conspiracies further marginalizes it even among creationists.

Creationist Arguments and Empirical Claims

Design and Teleological Evidence

Creationists invoke the , asserting that the purposeful arrangement and complexity in nature point to an intelligent designer rather than undirected processes. This perspective traces to classical formulations but gained prominence in modern creationism through analogies and empirical observations of biological and cosmic structures. Proponents argue that such features exhibit hallmarks of intentional , incompatible with gradual, unguided mechanisms. A foundational illustration is William Paley's from his 1802 work , where discovering a on a heath implies a skilled due to its intricate gears and purposeful function, paralleling the adaptive complexity of organisms like the eye or vertebrate skeleton. Paley contended that natural adaptations surpass mechanical artifacts in precision, necessitating a divine artificer. In biochemical contexts, advanced the concept of in (1996), defining systems as irreducibly complex if they cease functioning upon removal of any component, precluding stepwise evolutionary assembly. The bacterial flagellum exemplifies this, comprising over 30 proteins forming a rotary motor for propulsion; Behe maintained that no subset performs a viable precursor role, rendering Darwinian gradualism insufficient. William Dembski formalized as a design detector, quantifying patterns that are both improbably complex (low probability under chance) and specified (conforming to an independent pattern, like linguistic syntax). Applied to DNA's informational content—estimated at billions of base pairs encoding functional proteins—Dembski argued such specificity exceeds random origination, signaling intelligence akin to archaeological artifacts. Cosmologically, creationists cite the fine-tuning of universal constants, such as the gravitational force (G ≈ 6.67430 × 10^{-11} m³ kg^{-1} s^{-2}) and cosmological constant (Λ ≈ 10^{-52} m^{-2}), where deviations by factors as small as 1 in 10^{40} or 1 in 10^{120} would collapse stars, prevent chemistry, or yield an unstable universe devoid of life. Figures like physicist Paul Davies have quantified these sensitivities, which creationists interpret as calibrated for habitability, evincing purposeful adjustment over chance or multiverse hypotheses.

Geological and Fossil Record Interpretations

Creationists interpret the geological record as primarily the result of rapid, catastrophic deposition during the global Noachian , rather than slow, uniformitarian processes spanning millions of years. In this model, vast sedimentary layers formed through massive water movement, erosion of pre-flood landscapes, and subsequent sorting of sediments and organisms over a period of months to a year, around 2350 B.C. based on Ussher's chronology adjusted for modern scholarship. proponents, such as those at the Institute for Creation Research, argue that features like the Grand Canyon represent post-flood rapid erosion of soft, recently deposited sediments, citing experimental evidence from events like the 1980 eruption, which produced layered deposits and canyons in days. The fossil record's stratigraphic ordering is explained by ecological and hydrodynamic factors during the , not evolutionary progression: denser, less mobile were buried first in deeper waters, while air-breathing land animals, capable of fleeing to higher ground, appear higher in the sequence. researchers propose that fossil assemblages reflect "ecological zonation" (pre-flood habitats) combined with "hydrosorting" (sorting by shape, density, and mobility in turbulent waters), accounting for the general pattern of "simple" to "complex" without implying ancestry. Polystrate fossils—upright trees or organisms penetrating multiple strata, such as those in the Joggins Formation () spanning what uniformitarians call 300 million years—demonstrate that layers accumulated too quickly for evolutionary timescales, as slow burial would allow decay or erosion of the protruding portions. Absence of widespread transitional forms in the fossil record supports discrete creation of "kinds" rather than , with abrupt appearances like the —where major animal phyla emerge fully formed around 540 million years ago in conventional dating—interpreted as preservation of original created diversity from early flood stages, lacking precursors due to no evolutionary history. analyses highlight that over 30 phyla appear suddenly with complex features like eyes and digestive systems, challenging gradualist models even as some secular sources downplay the "explosion" term. Radiometric dating, used to assign vast ages to rocks and fossils, is critiqued for untestable assumptions of constant decay rates, closed systems, and known initial daughter isotopes; creationists point to discordant results (e.g., varying methods yielding ages from 1 million to 3 billion years for the same sample) and young-age indicators like detectable in diamonds and coal ( 5,730 years, implying formation within 50,000 years maximum). The RATE project by ICR and others documented accelerated nuclear decay episodes possibly tied to the , explaining excess heat and retention in zircons dated at 1.5 billion years yet retaining 58% helium consistent with 6,000 years. Old-earth creationists may concede long geological ages but attribute fossils to local catastrophes or progressive creation, though this variant less emphasizes flood-scale reinterpretation.

Biological and Anthropological Assertions

Creationists assert that certain biological systems exhibit irreducible complexity, meaning they consist of multiple interdependent parts that must all be present for the system to function, rendering stepwise Darwinian evolution implausible without foresight. Biochemist Michael Behe popularized this argument in his 1996 book Darwin's Black Box, citing examples such as the bacterial flagellum—a rotary motor with approximately 40 protein components that propels bacteria—and the vertebrate blood-clotting cascade, which involves a sequence of enzymatic reactions where removing any single factor leads to failure. Behe argues these systems could not arise through gradual mutations and natural selection, as intermediate forms would lack utility and be selected against, pointing instead to an intelligent cause. Further biological claims emphasize the origin of specified information in DNA, which creationists liken to coded messages requiring an intelligent source rather than random processes. Young-earth creationists from organizations like Answers in Genesis maintain that while microevolution (variation within kinds, such as beak size changes in finches) is observable, macroevolution—transforming one kind into another—lacks empirical support, with no documented laboratory instances of new genetic information arising to enable such transitions. They cite genetic limits to change, where mutations degrade rather than build novel structures, as evidenced by bacterial experiments showing bounded adaptability. In , creationists contend the record reveals no genuine transitional forms between apes and anatomically modern s, with purported "missing links" like or better classified as extinct varieties within or ape kinds rather than evolutionary bridges. They highlight the abrupt appearance of fully traits—such as , tool use, and symbolic art—in s dated around 40,000–50,000 years ago, without gradual precursors, as seen in sites like with engraved and shell beads. Genetic evidence, including analyses suggesting a recent common female ancestor () around 6,000–10,000 years ago under accelerated mutation rates post-Flood, supports a young lineage diverging from a single created pair rather than millions of years of ape- divergence. Creationists also argue human uniqueness in cognitive and moral capacities— syntax, abstract reasoning, and —defies materialistic origins, as these require integrated complexity beyond incremental selection, evidenced by the universal presence of recursive grammar in human absent in . These assertions collectively challenge uniformitarian evolutionary timelines, positing separate creation of kinds with built-in potential for variation but fixed boundaries.

Recent Theoretical Advances

In the field of young-earth creationism, genetic research has advanced models reconciling mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome mutation rates with a biblical timeline of approximately 4,500 to 6,000 years. Nathaniel T. Jeanson's analysis of high-quality sequencing data indicates a rapid Y-chromosome mutation rate consistent with post-Flood human population growth from Noah's family around 4,500 years ago, challenging evolutionary timelines requiring hundreds of thousands of years for observed diversity. Similarly, recalibrated mitochondrial mutation rates align with an upper limit of 10,000 years, with a preferred estimate of 6,000 years, and reveal three major haplogroups interpretable as genetic signatures from the wives of Noah's sons, integrating genetics with events like the Tower of Babel. These findings, detailed in Jeanson's 2022 book Traced and peer-reviewed papers, propose a reverse-engineering approach to human history using DNA as a historical record. Geological investigations have refined flood geology models through examinations of sedimentary features. Andrew A. Snelling's 2023 study of the Monument Fold in Arizona's documents soft-sediment deformation in Tapeats Sandstone layers, where unlithified beds deformed rapidly post-burial, supporting catastrophic deposition during a global flood rather than slow uniformitarian processes over millions of years. This evidence of preserved softness in strata, observed mere months after deposition in analogous modern settings, bolsters arguments for accelerated geological timelines within a young-earth framework. In cosmology, young-universe models have incorporated relativistic effects to address the distant problem. Recent proposals explore cosmic voids' influence on propagation, suggesting they mitigate the light-travel-time issue in a 6,000-year-old by altering paths and redshifts. Conferences such as the 2025 Creation Society annual meeting and Origins 2025 have featured papers advancing these and related astronomical models, alongside baraminology in creation biology, which statistically delineates "created kinds" through discontinuity analysis to identify boundaries of post-Flood diversification without . These developments, published in journals like Answers Journal, aim to construct a comprehensive creationist responsive to empirical .

Counterarguments and Debates

Scientific Rebuttals and Empirical Data

methods, including uranium-lead dating of zircon crystals from , consistently yield ages for the of approximately 4.54 billion years, corroborated by multiple independent systems that cross-validate results and refute claims of systematic error sufficient to compress timelines to thousands of years. Similarly, radiation analysis and Hubble constant measurements indicate a universe age of about 13.8 billion years, with light from distant galaxies requiring billions of years to reach , directly contradicting young Earth timelines under standard physical constants. The fossil record demonstrates a chronological progression of life forms, with prokaryotes appearing around 3.5 billion years ago, followed by eukaryotic diversification by 2 billion years ago, and complex multicellular organisms post-Cambrian explosion approximately 540 million years ago, showing gradual morphological transitions rather than simultaneous creation of kinds. Genetic evidence strongly supports universal common ancestry through the near-universality of the , shared sequences across domains, and endogenous retroviruses at orthologous genomic positions in , indicating inheritance from common ancestors rather than independent design. Claims of , such as Michael Behe's bacterial , fail empirical scrutiny as its components, including the in pathogens like , function as standalone injectisomes for protein export, providing a stepwise evolutionary precursor via co-option and . Observed speciation events, including laboratory-induced in fruit flies ( paulistorum) by 1963 and natural hybridization barriers in Central European blackcaps diverging since the 1960s due to migration patterns, demonstrate macroevolutionary mechanisms operating within human timescales, accumulating genetic changes incompatible with fixed kinds. These datasets, derived from convergent methodologies across , , and , form a predictive framework tested against falsifiable hypotheses, whereas creationist interpretations often require assumptions like accelerated decay rates or global hydrological sorting without independent corroboration.

Philosophical and Methodological Critiques

Philosophers of argue that creationism deviates from methodological naturalism, the principle that scientific explanations should invoke only natural causes and processes amenable to empirical investigation, rather than agents. This approach limits to testable hypotheses derived from observable phenomena, excluding appeals to divine intervention that cannot be independently verified or replicated. Creationist methodologies, by contrast, often prioritize scriptural authority over empirical data, subordinating evidence to preconceived theological commitments, which undermines the provisional and revisable of scientific inquiry. A core methodological critique centers on , as articulated by , who posited that scientific theories must be capable of being refuted by to demarcate them from . Creationist claims, such as direct divine creation of or a young Earth, resist falsification because proponents can invoke ad hoc adjustments—like undetectable miracles or reinterpretations of scripture—to accommodate contradictory data, such as radiometric dating results indicating Earth ages of approximately 4.54 billion years. For instance, models proposed by young-Earth creationists predict certain stratigraphic patterns, but when geological evidence shows gradual deposition over millions of years via uniformitarian processes, creationists attribute discrepancies to catastrophic divine acts without specifying testable predictions distinguishable from natural explanations. Philosophically, creationism is faulted for violating the principle of parsimony, or , which favors hypotheses requiring the fewest unproven assumptions to explain observed data. Evolutionary theory accounts for biological complexity through acting on heritable variation—processes directly observable in laboratories and field studies, such as antibiotic resistance in evolving over decades—without necessitating an additional, unobservable . Introducing a multiplies entities unnecessarily, as it demands explaining the designer's own origin and capabilities, leading to an of designers unless terminated arbitrarily by fiat. Critics like anticipated this in his 18th-century analysis of design arguments, noting that apparent in nature could arise from natural laws rather than intent, a view reinforced by of emphasizing explanatory simplicity over teleological posits. Further methodological concerns arise from creationism's selective engagement with evidence, often employing confirmatory by highlighting gaps in evolutionary knowledge—such as the explosion's rapid diversification around 540 million years ago—while ignoring integrative data like genetic homologies and endogenous retroviruses shared across species, which support . This contrasts with scientific methodology's requirement for theories to unify disparate fields, as does by linking , , and ; creationism, lacking such , functions more as interpretive framework than generative research program. Philosophers contend this renders it philosophically , prioritizing ideological consistency over causal realism grounded in verifiable mechanisms.

Theological and Internal Challenges

Creationism, particularly its young-earth variant, encounters theological challenges arising from diverse interpretations of biblical texts, historical Christian , and doctrinal consistency. Prominent among these is the debate over the and intent of Genesis 1–2, where strict literalism requires reconciling apparent sequential discrepancies: Genesis 1 depicts a structured order of on day three, animals on days five and six, followed by humanity; Genesis 2, however, focuses on the sixth day with humanity formed first, followed by and animals provided for the man. These differences suggest to critics that the accounts serve theological emphases—such as God's in Genesis 1 and humanity's role in Genesis 2—rather than a precise chronological , challenging the young-earth insistence on verbatim historical prose without supplementary narrative devices. Early church fathers further underscore this interpretive tension, as many eschewed a rigidly literal reading of the creation days. , in The Literal Meaning of Genesis (c. 401–415 AD), argued that God created all things instantaneously, with the "days" representing logical categories or the progressive revelation to angels rather than sequential 24-hour periods, to avoid conflicts with observable phenomena like the sun's creation on day four. Similarly, (c. 185–254 AD) and (c. 150–215 AD) favored allegorical elements in Genesis, viewing the text as accommodating human understanding rather than dictating scientific details. This patristic flexibility indicates that non-literal approaches predate modern , countering claims that young-earth literalism alone preserves biblical fidelity, and highlights how imposing a uniform historicist lens may overlook the text's ancient Near Eastern poetic framework. A core doctrinal challenge involves the nature of death relative to the Fall. Young-earth creationism posits no physical death—human or animal—prior to Adam's sin, interpreting Romans 5:12 ("death came through sin") and Genesis 1:31 ("very good" creation) as prohibiting prelapsarian mortality to uphold the redemptive necessity of Christ's atonement over death. Critics from old-earth perspectives argue this extends "death" beyond human spiritual separation from God, encompassing benign animal mortality or carnivory permitted in Genesis 1:30 (herbivory for animals), which biblical texts do not explicitly curse until post-Flood (Genesis 9:3). Requiring zero death strains exegesis, as passages like Ecclesiastes 3:19–21 equate human and animal ends without sin's etiology, and risks portraying God as instituting a world primed for mass extinction (e.g., via a global flood), incompatible with divine benevolence. These issues foster internal divisions within creationist circles, pitting young-earth advocates against old-earth creationists and theistic evolutionists who affirm through concordist or framework . Insisting on young-earth chronology as salvific —evident in organizations like labeling alternatives as compromise—exacerbates schisms, echoing historical debates but amplified by tying eschatological hope to empirical timelines unsubstantiated in creeds like the Nicene (325 AD). Such rigidity, critics contend, inverts proper by subordinating scriptural analogy and typology to a defensive literalism reactive to evolutionary , potentially undermining when scientific consensus on an ancient prompts faith crises among believers.

Religious and Cultural Contexts

Views in Christianity and Judaism

In , creationist interpretations of Genesis, particularly positing a literal six-day creation event roughly 6,000 years ago, remain prevalent among evangelical and fundamentalist Protestants, who view the biblical account as historical and authoritative over on and . A 2019 Gallup survey reported that 56% of U.S. Protestants affirmed created humans in their present form, rising to 68% among weekly church attenders, figures indicative of sustained support in conservative circles despite broader declines. Denominations including the and Seventh-day Adventists incorporate young Earth frameworks into doctrinal statements, tracing the latter's emphasis to 19th-century visions of founder . groups, such as Episcopalians and Presbyterians (USA), more commonly adopt old Earth or positions, treating Genesis as conveying theological truths about divine order rather than chronological specifics. The Catholic Church officially permits acceptance of biological evolution since Pope Pius XII's 1950 encyclical Humani Generis, which allowed research into human origins provided it excludes materialistic denial of the soul's divine creation, a stance reinforced by Pope John Paul II's 1996 address declaring evolution "more than a hypothesis" while subordinating it to teleological divine providence. Recent papal documents under Pope Francis, including the 2014 address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, reiterate compatibility between evolutionary mechanisms and faith, rejecting atheistic interpretations but affirming God's ultimate causality. This framework contrasts with stricter creationism by prioritizing empirical evidence for natural processes under metaphysical guidance, though individual Catholics vary, with surveys showing about 40% adhering to strict creationism akin to Protestant rates. In , creationist adherence to a literal Genesis narrative is less centralized than in evangelical , with rabbinic tradition historically permitting interpretive flexibility via midrashic allegory to address apparent scriptural-scientific tensions. Reform and Conservative movements predominantly endorse , viewing as conveying ethical and existential insights rather than empirical history, and have integrated Darwinian theory since the early without doctrinal conflict. spans a spectrum: modern Orthodox scholars often defend old Earth accommodations or guided evolution, arguing Genesis days represent epochs or frameworks consistent with cosmology, as articulated in works by rabbis like ; ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) sects, however, prioritize literalism, dismissing as incompatible with divine fiat and traditions. A 2016 Pew Research analysis of revealed low evolution acceptance among Haredim (3%) and modern Orthodox (11%), versus 83% among secular , patterns partly attributable to insulated educational systems emphasizing textual fidelity over secular . U.S. exhibit higher overall alignment with (over 80% in aggregate estimates), reflecting and minimal institutional promotion of young Earth models.

Perspectives in Islam and Other Faiths

In , the presents a of divine creation over six periods or "days" (ayyam), as stated in verses such as Surah Al-A'raf 7:54, which describes creating the heavens and in six days before establishing Himself on the . This account includes the formation of from clay (Surah Al-Hijr 15:26) and the placement of humanity as Allah's vicegerents on , emphasizing purposeful and direct intervention rather than unguided processes. Many Muslim scholars and lay believers interpret these descriptions literally, viewing them as incompatible with Darwinian , particularly human origins, due to the explicit as the first without progenitors. Surveys indicate widespread adherence to creationist views among , with acceptance of remaining low in many Muslim-majority countries; for instance, polling from 1996 to 2003 showed rates as low as 8% in some nations, often favoring over . While some contemporary Muslim thinkers, such as those affiliated with the Yaqeen Institute, argue for compatibility between Quranic verses and or an ancient earth, and human descent from apes are frequently rejected as contradicting scriptural accounts of instantaneous formation. This perspective has gained traction in institutions like Turkey's state-backed creationist campaigns since the 1980s, promoting "Quranic creationism" that accepts geological but insists on divine orchestration excluding random . Debates persist on whether Quranic "days" are literal 24-hour periods or extended epochs (tawilat), with literalists citing the text's precision and classical tafsirs (exegeses) by scholars like , who affirm sequential, direct acts of creation. Metaphorical interpretations, allowing for evolutionary mechanisms under divine guidance, are advanced by reformist figures but remain minority positions, often critiqued for diluting the Quran's unambiguous on Adam's unique origin. Among other faiths, creationist perspectives akin to Islamic literalism are less prevalent. Hinduism's scriptures, such as the and , depict cyclic cosmogonies with as a creator figure emanating universes from primordial chaos, but these narratives emphasize eternal cycles (kalpas) spanning billions of years rather than a singular genesis opposing . Many Hindu thinkers integrate Darwinian theory with concepts like (Vishnu's incarnations mirroring evolutionary stages), viewing biological change as divinely guided without scriptural mandate for special human creation. , lacking a personal , generally eschew creationism, attributing origins to interdependent causation () compatible with scientific naturalism and rejecting anthropocentric genesis myths. , blending with Indic elements, affirms a timeless creator () but permits evolutionary interpretations, as Nanak's hymns focus on unity and illusion (maya) over literal .

Theistic Evolution and Compatibilist Positions

, also known as evolutionary creationism, maintains that the biological process of , as described by modern science, constitutes the means by which a divine creator brought about the diversity of life, including human beings, over billions of years. This perspective accepts for an ancient , common ancestry among , and mechanisms such as and genetic mutation, interpreting them as instruments of providential design rather than unguided randomness. Unlike atheistic , it insists on God's ultimate sovereignty, though the extent of direct intervention varies among adherents; some, like biologist Kenneth Miller, describe the process as unguided in its particulars yet encompassed within divine intent. Compatibilist positions extend this reconciliation by asserting that evolutionary and theistic operate in complementary domains: elucidates mechanistic "how" questions through observable , while addresses teleological "why" questions of purpose and origin. Proponents argue that no inherent logical contradiction exists between random and —empirically validated processes—and a creator's oversight, drawing on philosophical to resolve apparent tensions with scriptural accounts of creation. This framework gained traction in the amid accumulating , genetic, and cosmological evidence supporting , prompting theologians to reinterpret Genesis as theological narrative rather than literal chronology. In , the Roman Catholic Church exemplifies institutional endorsement, with Pope Pius XII's 1950 Humani Generis permitting scholarly investigation into bodily while affirming the soul's direct infusion by God and rejecting materialistic interpretations that deny divine causality. advanced this in a 1996 address to the , declaring "more than a " based on interdisciplinary , provided it acknowledges transcendent origins and ethical imperatives rooted in faith. Many denominations, including those affiliated with the American Scientific Affiliation founded in 1941, similarly adopt compatibilist stances, viewing as compatible with doctrines like through models such as hominids or theistic guidance of evolutionary contingencies. This approach diverges sharply from young-earth creationism, which posits a literal six-day creation approximately 6,000–10,000 years ago, rejects and pre-Fall death in the fossil record, and interprets Genesis as historical chronology in conflict with standard geological and biological timelines. Theistic evolutionists prioritize empirical across disciplines—such as yielding ages of 4.54 billion years and genetic homologies indicating shared descent—over strict literalism, arguing that causal realism demands integrating observable natural laws with theistic causation without positing miracles contra evidence. Critics from stricter creationist circles, however, contend it dilutes scriptural authority by accommodating secular timelines, potentially undermining doctrines like a historical . Key organizations advancing these views include the BioLogos Foundation, established in 2007 by former director to foster dialogue between evangelical Christianity and , emphasizing God's use of secondary causes in creation. Such positions remain prevalent among scientifically literate theists, with surveys indicating substantial acceptance in non-fundamentalist religious communities, though they face internal theological challenges over reconciling evolutionary contingency with divine .

Societal Prevalence and Influence

Global and Regional Surveys

Belief in creationism, defined as the view that a divine being created humans in their present form relatively recently without , varies significantly by region, with surveys revealing higher adherence in societies with strong and lower rates in secular contexts. Comprehensive global surveys are limited, but comparative studies across nations highlight these disparities, often influenced by polling question phrasing, which can affect reported figures by up to 10 percentage points according to methodological analyses. In the United States, the 2024 Gallup poll reported that 37% of adults endorse the position that " created beings in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so," marking a decline from 40% in and a peak of 47% in 1999, while 38% favor -guided and 24% accept unguided . This strict creationist view correlates with frequent , levels, and political affiliation, with Republicans and those without degrees showing higher support. A 2023 international survey across seven countries—, , , , , , and the —found creationism to be a minority position everywhere, but with the U.S. at 24%, the highest among them, compared to 18% in , 14% in , and lower elsewhere; the study emphasized that even in high-religiosity nations like and , outright rejection of was not dominant. In , rates are notably lower; for instance, a survey indicated only 12% hold a creationist view, reflecting broader acceptance of evolutionary theory amid secular trends.
Country/Region% Strict CreationismYearSource
37%2024Gallup
24%2023Multi-country survey
12%2023UK public survey
18%2023Multi-country survey
14%2023Multi-country survey
These figures underscore that while creationism persists as a substantial in the U.S., it constitutes a minority globally in surveyed populations, though data from regions like or much of the Islamic world remain underrepresented in recent polls, where suggests stronger scriptural literalism. The inclusion of creationist perspectives in public school curricula has sparked prolonged legal disputes in the United States, primarily under the First Amendment's , which prohibits government endorsement of . These battles evolved from outright bans on evolutionary theory in the early to mandates for "balanced treatment" of and, later, (ID), with courts consistently ruling that such requirements lack secular purpose and advance religious viewpoints. The of July 1925 in , marked an early flashpoint, challenging the Butler Act that forbade teaching human evolution in state-funded schools. High school teacher was prosecuted for violating the law during a biology class; after a highly publicized featuring attorneys for the defense and for the prosecution, Scopes was convicted on July 21 and fined $100—the statutory minimum—but the overturned the verdict in 1927 on a technicality regarding the fine's imposition by the judge rather than a jury. The case did not repeal the Butler Act, which remained in effect until 1967, but it galvanized national debate over and religious influence in schools. By the 1960s, challenges targeted anti-evolution statutes directly. In (1968), biology teacher Susan Epperson refused to teach from a covering due to a 1928 state law criminalizing such instruction; the U.S. unanimously struck down the ban on November 12, 1968, holding that it violated the Establishment Clause by conforming to a religious doctrine rather than serving a secular educational purpose, thereby restricting teachers' . This decision invalidated similar laws in other states but prompted creationist groups to reframe their arguments as ""—purportedly evidence-based alternatives excluding explicit biblical references. Efforts to mandate creation science failed in court. A 1981 Arkansas law requiring "balanced treatment" of creation science and evolution was ruled unconstitutional in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education (1982) by a federal district court, which found no scientific validity to creation science and determined the act advanced religion. Similarly, in (1987), the invalidated a Louisiana statute on June 19 demanding equal classroom time for creation science whenever was taught; in a 5-4 decision applying the Lemon test for violations, the Court concluded the law had no genuine secular purpose and was designed to discredit evolution by promoting a religious alternative. Justice Brennan's majority opinion emphasized legislative history showing intent to incorporate fundamentalist beliefs into classes. Proponents then advocated , arguing it inferred design from biological complexity without invoking supernatural creators. This approach was tested in Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District (2005), where the Dover, , school board required ninth-grade teachers to read a statement questioning Darwinian evolution and referencing ID via the book . On December 20, 2005, U.S. District Judge ruled the policy unconstitutional in a comprehensive 139-page opinion, finding ID to be a repackaged form of creationism with theological underpinnings, not a testable scientific theory, as it relied on arguments lacking empirical . The court noted school board members' religious motivations, including references to creationism in earlier drafts, violated the Establishment Clause by endorsing religion over neutral . Post-Kitzmiller, direct mandates for creationist content have waned, but some states have passed "" laws allowing teachers to discuss scientific critiques of without prescribing alternatives. For example, Tennessee's 2012 law permits instruction on "scientific weaknesses" of evolutionary theory, upheld against challenges for lacking coercive religious elements. As of 2025, no major federal rulings have overturned these provisions, though critics argue they indirectly enable creationist views; empirical surveys indicate remains the standard in U.S. public school science curricula, with creationism confined to elective or extracurricular contexts to avoid constitutional issues.

Political and Cultural Ramifications

Creationism has significantly influenced American politics, particularly through legal challenges over public school curricula. The 1925 in , where teacher was convicted under the Butler Act for teaching but the verdict was later overturned on a technicality, highlighted tensions between religious fundamentalism and , galvanizing national debate on science instruction. Subsequent efforts, such as Louisiana's 1981 Balanced Treatment for Creation-Science and Evolution-Science Act, were invalidated by the U.S. Supreme Court in (1987) by an 8-1 decision, ruling it advanced a religious doctrine in violation of the Establishment Clause. In 2005, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District saw a federal judge declare —a form of neo-creationism—not science and unconstitutional for public school endorsement, reinforcing judicial barriers to mandating creationist views. Politically, creationist beliefs correlate strongly with conservative ideologies, serving as a litmus test in Republican primaries and platforms. Gallup polls indicate that 60% of Republicans in 2008 favored the view that humans were created in their present form within the last 10,000 years, compared to 38% of Democrats, a divide persisting into recent surveys where 37% of Americans overall hold strict creationist views, disproportionately among conservatives and the religious. Republican candidates, such as four of five Arizona GOP contenders for state schools chief in 2018 and three of four Texas hopefuls in 2013, have advocated teaching creationism alongside , reflecting its role in mobilizing evangelical voters despite lacking formal endorsement in national platforms like the 2024 Republican document. Culturally, creationism manifests in symbols and institutions that reinforce identity among religious communities while exacerbating societal divides. Attractions like the Ark Encounter in Kentucky, a massive Noah's Ark replica, embody creationist narratives and have been critiqued as fueling Christian nationalism and culture war rhetoric, drawing millions yet polarizing public discourse on biblical literalism versus scientific consensus. High-profile debates, such as the 2014 Bill Nye-Ken Ham exchange viewed by over 3 million online, underscore creationism's endurance as a flashpoint, often framing evolution as morally corrosive despite empirical support for the latter. Globally, creationism elicits varied responses; it remains a minority position in surveyed nations outside the U.S., with less political traction in secular Europe, though figures like Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdoğan have promoted it in education since 2017, contrasting America's judicial containment. These ramifications include entrenched polarization, where creationism bolsters conservative resistance to perceived secular overreach, influencing voter alignments and ongoing skirmishes over educational standards.

Key Proponents and Institutions

Influential Thinkers and Scientists

Henry M. Morris (1918–2006), a hydraulic engineer and former professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, co-authored The Genesis Flood: The Biblical Record and Its Scientific Implications in 1961 with theologian John C. Whitcomb Jr. (1924–2020), providing a systematic defense of young-earth creationism through flood geology, which posits that Noah's Flood catastrophically deposited most sedimentary rock layers and fossils, challenging uniformitarian interpretations of Earth's history. Morris founded the Institute for Creation Research in 1970, establishing it as a center for scientific research supporting literal Genesis interpretation, including studies on cosmology, biology, and geology that argue for a recent creation based on decay rates and fossil distributions. Preceding Morris's work, (1870–1963), a Canadian and Seventh-day Adventist educator, pioneered modern in books like The New Geology (1923), proposing that geological strata resulted from rapid sedimentation during a global deluge rather than slow uniform processes, influencing later creationists by reinterpreting fossil sequences as evidence of ecological zoning during the . Ken Ham (born 1951), an Australian-born educator with a background in environmental biology, founded in 1994 to promote young-earth creationism, emphasizing biblical authority over evolutionary timelines; he oversaw the opening of the in 2007 and the in 2016, which feature exhibits arguing that observational science—such as rapid experiments and genetic entropy models—supports a 6,000-year-old . In the intelligent design variant of creationism, (1940–2019), a UC Berkeley law professor, authored Darwin on Trial in 1991, critiquing Darwinian evolution's philosophical naturalism and methodological flaws, thereby launching the ID movement by advocating empirical detection of design through in biological systems. Biochemist , professor emeritus at , advanced ID in Darwin's Black Box (1996) with the concept of , exemplified by the bacterial —a requiring multiple interdependent parts whose stepwise evolution lacks functional precursors, as argued from protein interaction data and co-option limitations.

Major Organizations and Publications

The Creation Research Society, established in 1963 by ten scientists seeking to integrate with empirical inquiry, requires voting members to hold doctoral-level degrees in relevant fields and affirm a creed supporting six-day creation and no death before the Fall. It publishes the Creation Research Society Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal issued since 1964 featuring articles across scientific disciplines from a young-earth perspective. The Institute for Creation Research (ICR), founded in 1970 by hydraulic engineer , focuses on purportedly supporting biblical creationism, including refutations of evolutionary timelines through and research conducted by its staff over five decades. Its bimonthly Acts & Facts magazine disseminates these findings to a general audience, alongside books and educational materials emphasizing recent creation and a global Noachian flood. Answers in Genesis (AiG), incorporated in the United States in 1993 and operational from 1994 under CEO , aims to uphold the Bible's authority starting from Genesis by producing resources that challenge evolutionary theory with geological and biological arguments favoring a young earth. The organization distributes Answers magazine, launched in 2006 with initial circulation exceeding 33,000 subscribers, and operates facilities like the and to promote these views. Creation Ministries International (CMI), originating from Australian creationist efforts in the 1970s and formalized as an international network of autonomous entities post-1990s splits with related groups, provides materials asserting scientific compatibility with literal Genesis accounts, including refutations of deep-time . Key publications include Journal of Creation, a technical peer-reviewed outlet, and Creation magazine, both advocating young-earth interpretations with contributions from PhD-level scientists.

References

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