Mike Matthews is a young-earth creationist affiliated with Answers in Genesis (AiG), one of the most delusionally pseudoscientific, fundamentalist conspiracy
groups in the US. In particular, Matthews is editor-in-chief of Answers
magazine, Ken Ham’s in-house vanity journal and (inadvertent) attempt to make Christianity look as
silly as possible. Here,
for instance, is Matthews himself proving that God exists and that the Bible
should be read literally, as a scientific treatise: Basically, you already know
it, so it’s just a matter of removing the moral failings that cloud your
judgment: “All people already know God
because He is clearly seen in His creation, and His moral law is also written
on their hearts. But they [i.e. atheists and evolutionary biologists] ‘suppress’, or hold down, the truth in
unrighteousness because their proud hearts are rebellious and they do not want
to submit to the truth.” Moreover, any inquiry must start with
presuppositions, and it is blithely clear that none are better than the Bible
(particularly because the Bible is essentially self-affirming, the Bible is
God’s word and asserts that God’s word is the truth; apparently Matthews is
impressed). Of course, Matthews misses the point that in science one also tests
one’s presuppositions; indeed, he explicitly
misses the point, by stating that one’s presuppositions must be an “ultimate standard” that “itself must be ‘self-attesting’ and
‘self-authenticating.’.” This is apparently what happens when idiots try to
read Descartes’s Meditations without adult guidance. Here is Matthews arguing that the Bible must be true because it is so old.
One of AiG’s primary pastimes is to try to
shoehorn scientific data and terminology into a young-earth framework by
disregarding everything that doesn’t fit (which is most things). Matthews has –
together with legendary crackpot Andrew Snelling – for instance been working on determining the precise dates of the ice ages by
reading the Bible and disregarding the facts, concluding that the ice age
occurred during the Pleistocene and that the Pleistocene (and ice age) took
place sometime in the middle of the Bronze Age during the time of the tower of
Babel, four generations after the Flood.
The stone age, then (they accept that archaeologists have uncovered stone tools
dating from the Pleistocene – earlier, too, but disregard that), occurred among
people scattered after Babel, and lasted some 250 years, the primary
independent evidence being that it’s absurd that human beings would use such
crude and ugly stone tools for millions of years since humans are way smarter
than that. So, as expected, there is no independent evidence (supporting their
idea; there’s plenty contradicting it, of course. Some more details of their,
uh, ravings are discussed here.
For a discussion of what happens if you try to cram the Pleistocene climate
record into a 250-year period, this one is good.
Apparently, Matthews has two degrees from
Bob Jones University,
which is as impressive as buying them yourself by following a link in a spam
email.
Diagnosis: Oh, the
anyone-who-disagrees-with-me-do-so-only-because-their-eyes-are-occluded-by-sin
gambit, almost as annoying as and even dafter than the conspiracy theorist’s shill gambit.
Matthews is entirely delusional, completely unreasonable, and part of one of
the dumbest fundamentalist organizations in the world. Whether his activities
help their efforts or not is a question we’ll leave open.
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