Not exact matches
... except it opposes history,
archeology, philosophy, science, civilization and promotes destruction, anarchy, war, slavery, bigotry, terror... yes, religion poisons everything and Islam is
even more cruel!
My multi-PHD scientist friends (Geology,
archeology, physics, chemistry, genetics and things you havnt
even heard of) just smile and shake their heads.
Recent
archeology exhibits (I'm thinking OMSI in Portland) have highlighted the fact that many dinosaurs appeared to have feathers or proto - feathers
even as they were bi-pedal, non-flyers.
I could go on and elaborate on a number of other disciplines or facts that creationists have to pretend into oblivion to retain their faith, including the Ice Ages, cavemen and early hominids, much of microbiology, paleontology and
archeology, continental drift and plate tectonics,
even large parts of medical research (medical research on monkeys and mice only works because they share a common ancestor with us and therefore our fundamental cell biology and basic body architecture is identical to theirs).
Even if one believes that the various claims within the Bible are wholly accurate, it is always possible that a new discovery in
archeology, history, or biblical scholarship will overturn the current body of evidence.
Certainly, so far as
archeology has been able to trace the beginnings of culture, from the first, men have struggled to understand themselves and the world in which they live and have been aware,
even if dimly, of a power or powers outside themselves which they have either revered or feared and have endeavored to find ways of propitiating and of bringing to their assistance.
By his last season
even Mellaart was out of date: scientific
archeology had arrived, and with it a preference for the quantifiable over the symbolic, for testable hypotheses over stories.
«Through an innovative process of layering, embellishing and eroding materials, Bradford's paintings are a kind of an
archeology of the present,
even as they explore the limits and possibilities of abstraction.»