About This Book
The author reviews fossil succession, strata, and other geological evidence that have been taken to support vast antiquity, then challenges the inference that observed signs must indicate long formative histories. He advances the principle of prochronism, proposing that organisms and earth features might have been created with apparent age—such as fossils, tree-rings, and sedimentary layers—that testify to processes which did not actually occur. The work mixes detailed natural-history description, critique of inductive reasoning, and theological reflection to offer an alternative way of reconciling observable geology with a literal interpretation of origin accounts while admitting limits to purely empirical conclusions.
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