Kevin Anderson is a
director of the Creation Research Society
and a young earth creationist.
Apparently, he also has a real degree in microbiology, which makes him one of
vanishingly few creationists with genuine and relevant credentials and
something of a sideshow star in the creationist circus – you’ll see him make
appearances e.g. in Thomas Purifoy’s “documentary” Is Genesis History?
Yes, Betteridge’s law
applies, though the film actually tries to answer the question unequivocally in
the affirmative: after all, its crucial premise is that “[t]he gospel of
Jesus Christ therefore stands or falls along with the historicity of the first
chapters of Genesis,” so they didn’t have any choice: evidence or reality
be damned. The main target, after all, is “theistic evolutionists” and
the case for the central thesis is accordingly made on theological, not
scientific, grounds.
Anderson has published several papers in
venues like Answer in Genesis’s
vanity
house journal Answers,
and is a regular contributor to creationist conferences (oh, yes: young-earth
creationists do the full cargo cult science
routine), for instance on
the (mythical) discoveries
of soft tissue in dinosaur remains
– creationists love those,
since findings of soft tissues could be used to suggest that there is something
wrong with the dating procedures used by mainstream science (and the absence of
such is actually compelling evidence against recent dinosaurs, but
creationists tend not to consider contrary evidence as falsifying).
Like many other creationists,
Anderson is not particularly happy with the fact that the evolution of the
beneficial mutation of lactase persistence in humans
is a rather startling example of evolution in action; together with creationist
mainstay Georgia Purdom,
he has tried to suggest that lactase persistence “[r]ather than being an example of ‘evolution in
action,’ adaptive mutation is an awesome witness to God’s design of bacteria,” because just so. The results were published in the Proceedings
of the Sixth International Conference on Creationism, which is certainly
refereed by Anderson’s and Purdom’s peers.
Diagnosis: Yes, they might come across as
confused, almost pitiful village idiots, but we really shouldn’t forget that creationists
and religious fundies remain a major force in the US today, and Anderson is a
relatively central figure.
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