It’s about time Darwinism is seen for what it is.
Why are brilliant and logical scientists not reasonable on the question of the ultimate cause of the unity, diversity, and complexity of life on Earth? We wrongly think that an accurate view of life’s origins can be deduced by science and logic alone apart from faith and humble submission to God’s Word. Without the light of God’s Word, unbelievers have built up an edifice, a theory of life’s origins known as Darwinian Evolution, which they believe is an impregnable fortress. In our Darwin-dominated society, blind chance, mutation, and natural selection have received most of the glory for the unity, diversity, and complexity of life on Earth. It’s about time this philosophy is seen for what it is: a sandcastle on the beach, in the face of the rising tide.
Dr. Gordon Wilson is currently a Senior Fellow of Natural History at New Saint Andrews College in Moscow, Idaho. Before coming to NSA he was a faculty member at Liberty University from 1991-2003.
He has also taught on a part-time basis at the University of Idaho and Lynchburg College. Gordon received his Ph.D. in Environmental Science and Public Policy from George Mason University in 2003, and also earned his M.S. in Entomology (1989) and B.S. in Education/Biology (1984) at the University of Idaho.
He has published his dissertation research on the reproductive ecology of the Eastern Box Turtle (Terrapene carolina carolina) in Southeastern Naturalist and The Herpetological Bulletin. He regularly writes popular natural history articles for Answers Magazine and has recently published a biology textbook called “The Riot and the Dance”. He is also the narrator of a nature documentary series called by the same name. Gordon and his wife Meredith have four children and eleven grandchildren. In 2019 he published his book “A Different Shade of Green: A biblical approach to environmentalism and the dominion mandate.” He is co-host with Will Boyd on a podcast called “Notes from the Field”. Gordon loves to herp (look for, catch, identify, and photograph reptiles and amphibians) during the appropriate seasons.