Difference between revisions of "2011 Creation Museum news"

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* May 22.  '''Eveloce''' blog. Cincinnati, Ohio. USA. [http://eveloce.scienceblog.com/2011/05/22/a-trip-to-the-creation-science-museum/ A Trip to the Creation “Science” Museum] by Steve Potter.<br />"Oh Boy. Oh Joy. I live in Cincinnati, home of the “Creation Museum”. In case you didn’t know, it is a “museum” dedicated to a literal interpretation of the bible. Earth is only a few thousand years old. God created all life on earth as we see it today. Evolution is wrong, never happened. The earth was completely flooded, and all land life would have perished, but for Noah’s Ark."
 
* May 22.  '''Eveloce''' blog. Cincinnati, Ohio. USA. [http://eveloce.scienceblog.com/2011/05/22/a-trip-to-the-creation-science-museum/ A Trip to the Creation “Science” Museum] by Steve Potter.<br />"Oh Boy. Oh Joy. I live in Cincinnati, home of the “Creation Museum”. In case you didn’t know, it is a “museum” dedicated to a literal interpretation of the bible. Earth is only a few thousand years old. God created all life on earth as we see it today. Evolution is wrong, never happened. The earth was completely flooded, and all land life would have perished, but for Noah’s Ark."
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====April====
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* April 1. '''Curator: The Museum Journal'''. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.2151-6952.2011.00078.x/full Risen Apes and Fallen Angels: The New Museology of Human Origins] by Stephen T. Asma. Volume 54, Number 2, pp. 141–163, April 2011. <br />"'''Abstract'''  There has been a little explosion of “origin” exhibitions in the past few years. The recent bicentennial of Darwin’s birth, in 2009, ushered in a bevy of traveling exhibitions and events. Grand-scale permanent exhibitions have recently opened at the American Museum of Natural History (the Spitzer Hall of Human Origins) in New York, and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History (the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins) in Washington, D.C. A new museology is afoot, and some of the recent changes are worth tracking. And let’s not forget the recently opened Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky. Even in creationist thinking, where views seem eternally and stubbornly intransigent, there are new fads and museological fashions."
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====March====
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* March 1. '''Journal of Religion in Europe'''. [http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/jre/2011/00000004/00000001/art00005 Museality as a Matrix of the Production, Reception, and Circulation of Knowledge Concerning Religion] by Alexandra Grieser, Adrian Hermann, and Katja Triplett. Volume 4, Number 1, 2011 , pp. 40-70, March 1, 2011.<br />
  
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 11:07, 2 June 2011

May

  • May 30. OneNewsNow.com. Tupelo, Mississippi. USA. Creation Museum -- 4 years and counting by Charles Butts.
    "Answers in Genesis is celebrating the fourth anniversary of its Creation Museum, which has welcomed at least 1.3 million visitors so far."
    "In addition to the everyday crowd, more than 300 media sources, including Arab media outlet Al-Jazeera, have paid a visit. Co-founder Mark Looy tells OneNewsNow his group has received plenty of feedback."
  • May 22. Eveloce blog. Cincinnati, Ohio. USA. A Trip to the Creation “Science” Museum by Steve Potter.
    "Oh Boy. Oh Joy. I live in Cincinnati, home of the “Creation Museum”. In case you didn’t know, it is a “museum” dedicated to a literal interpretation of the bible. Earth is only a few thousand years old. God created all life on earth as we see it today. Evolution is wrong, never happened. The earth was completely flooded, and all land life would have perished, but for Noah’s Ark."

April

  • April 1. Curator: The Museum Journal. Risen Apes and Fallen Angels: The New Museology of Human Origins by Stephen T. Asma. Volume 54, Number 2, pp. 141–163, April 2011.
    "Abstract  There has been a little explosion of “origin” exhibitions in the past few years. The recent bicentennial of Darwin’s birth, in 2009, ushered in a bevy of traveling exhibitions and events. Grand-scale permanent exhibitions have recently opened at the American Museum of Natural History (the Spitzer Hall of Human Origins) in New York, and the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History (the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins) in Washington, D.C. A new museology is afoot, and some of the recent changes are worth tracking. And let’s not forget the recently opened Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky. Even in creationist thinking, where views seem eternally and stubbornly intransigent, there are new fads and museological fashions."

March

See Also