Sep 13, 2016 | Answers in Genesis, Historical Science, Ken Ham, Mark Masthay, Observational Science, Science |
by Mark Masthay Continuing from his earlier post examining observational science and certitude, this week Dr. Mark Masthay clarifies the epistemic differences between observational science and his own chemistry lab for achieving scientific certainty. Because I do not...
Sep 9, 2016 | Age of the Earth, Answers in Genesis, Historical Science, Ken Ham, Mark Masthay, Observational Science, Science |
by Mark Masthay Rounding out our Putting Observational Science to the Test series, Dr. Mark Masthay, Associate Professor and former Chair of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Dayton, presents a series of posts in which he provides a case for how...
Sep 6, 2016 | Answers in Genesis, Historical Science, Ken Ham, Observational Science, Robert Brecha, Science |
by Robert Brecha Dr. Bob Brecha continues his discussion of Ken Ham’s definition of observational science, considering the ways this definition impacts the everyday work of scientific inquiry. Few scientists would, if pressed hard, claim to be investigating “the...
Sep 2, 2016 | Answers in Genesis, Historical Science, Ken Ham, Observational Science, Robert Brecha, Science |
by Robert Brecha The second entry of our Putting Observational Science to the Test series comes from Dr. Robert Brecha, Professor of Physics and Research Director for the Hanley Sustainability Institute at the University of Dayton. In this post, Robert questions...