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Darwin's Black Box: The
Biochemical Challenge to Evolution,
Michael Behe, associate professor of
biochemistry, Lehigh University
(Pennsylvania), 1996. Demonstrates that
the tiny building blocks of life—cells
and their myriad components—are far too
complex for their codependent parts and
processes to have evolved without an
outside, intelligent design at work.
Mere
Creation: Science, Faith & Intelligent
Design, edited by William
Dembski, 1998. A collection of academic
writings from physics, astrophysics,
biology, anthropology, biology,
mechanical engineering and mathematics
that challenge Darwinism and offer
evidence supporting intelligent design
in the universe.
Evolution: A Theory in Crisis,
Michael Denton, senior research fellow,
University of Otago, New Zealand, 1996.
Examines features of the natural world
that mutation and natural selection
cannot explain and shows the
impossibility of transitional forms
required for Darwinian evolution to have
taken place.
Creation
and Evolution: Rethinking the Evidence
From Science and the Bible,
Alan Hayward, 1985. Written by a British
physicist, an insightful book on the
pros and cons of the evolution-vs.-creation
controversy.
The Neck
of the Giraffe: Where Darwin Went Wrong,
Francis Hitching, 1982. Points out many
of the problems in the traditional view
of evolution.
Darwin
on Trial, Phillip Johnson,
professor of law, University of
California, Berkeley, 1993. Examines
scientific details that argue
convincingly against the theory of
evolution.
Reason
in the Balance: The Case Against
Naturalism in Science, Law & Education,
Phillip Johnson, 1995. Discusses the
cultural implications of belief in
evolution; that is, that the philosophy
behind Darwinian evolution has become in
effect the dominant established religion
in many societies.
Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds,
Phillip John- son, 1997. Written
specifically for older students and
their parents and teachers to prepare
them for the antireligion bias inherent
in most advanced education.
Objections Sustained: Subversive Essays
on Evolution, Law & Culture,
Phillip Johnson, 1998. Compilation of
essays ranging from evolution and
culture to law and religion.
Bones of
Contention: A Creationist Assessment of
the Human Fossils, Marvin
Lubenow, 1992. Documents the serious
problems with the supposed links between
man and apes.
What Is
Creation Science?, Henry Morris
and Gary Parker, 1987. Two creation
scientists provide a critical
examination of the major arguments used
to support evolution.
Shattering the Myths of Darwinism,
Richard Milton, 1997. Mr. Milton, a
science journalist and noncreationist,
reveals the circular reasoning
Darwinists must rely on for their
arguments while discussing data widely
acknowledged in scientific circles.
Tornado
in a Junkyard: The Relentless Myth of
Darwinism, James Perloff, 1999.
A self-professed former atheist offers
an easy-to-read view of evidence
contradicting Darwinism, including many
quotations from evolutionists and
creationists. (The title is taken from a
British astronomer's assessment that the
likelihood of higher life-forms emerging
through random mutation is comparable to
the chance of a tornado sweeping through
a junkyard being able to build a Boeing
747 airliner.)
Not by
Chance: Shattering the Modern Theory of
Evolution, Lee Spetner,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
1998. Dr. Spetner shows that one of the
fundamental premises of
neo-Darwinism—that random mutation
created the kinds of variations that
allowed macroevolution to take place—is
fatally flawed and could never have
happened as Darwinists claim.
Icons of
Evolution: Science or Myth?,
Jonathan Wells, Yale University and
University of California at Berkeley,
2000. Dr. Wells, a postdoctoral
biologist, documents that the mostused
examples Darwinists call on to support
evolution— including those commonly
found in recent textbooks—are false or
misleading, raising the question of
whether evolutionists deliberately
misinform students and suppress
scientific evidence that contradicts
their theory. |