Beowulf said:
Do Creationists Publish in Notable Refereed Journals?
All of which is completely
irrelevant unless we are talking about the specific arguments in support of their "creation science".
That a certain scientist publishes articles on the migration patterns of sea turtles in a peer-reviewed journal and then goes around and publishes articles about the Flood in a pseudoscience journal dedicated to creationism has no bearing whatsoever.
This be like me saying that Richard Dawkins occassionally writes articles for
Skeptic or
Atheist magazine has any bearing whatsoever on the work he publishes concerning molecular genetics.
In both cases, one set of their work may be reputable while the other set is completely dubious (or at least suspicious from a scientific vantage). That the same person published both sets of work is irrelevant, as there is no direct correlation (in terms of scientific credibility) between the two.
Beowulf said:
By trying to equate my position with "flat earth hypothesis" or ridiculous "conspiracy theories" a person could easily make my position look silly.
Not difficult to do, as all of the aformentioned are on equal footing in science.
Beowulf said:
This again goes into the realm of mere opinion and could be an Appeal to Common Practice if anything.
If by "mere opinion" you mean "peer-reviewed scientific research", then sure. . .
I do find your references interesting, though, from a purely psychological perspective. It would be like me citing "evidence" for penis envy in a periodical called the
Freudian Research Initiative. These journals are clearly designed to champion one theoretical point of view above all others, being characterized not by a field-specific research methodology, but by the universal acceptance of foregone conclusions.
Real scientific journals don't do that. They provide diverse points of view and do not unilaterally support any given set of conclusions in the field. If I opened up an issue of
Psychology Bulletin, I would see no foregone assumptions that behaviorism has more merit than humanism, for example. I would simply see research articles arguing for either perspective.
This is why your "evidence" is not science, but apologism. Science uses a methodology to uncover evidence and form tentative conclusions or predictions based on that evidence. Apologism begins with the conclusions at the start, and then proceeds to selectively "find" the "evidence" that supports their conclusions.
That is precisely why everything you have cited in the past several posts has no scientific merit whatsoever. It is theology masquerading as science.
Laterz.