Home |
Our Focus |
Search |
What's New |
Intelligent Design |
Theism |
Darwinism & Evolution |
Atheism |
Interviews |
Book Reviews |
Special Interest |
Debates |
Related Links |
Mere Creation Site |
Leadership U.
Glossary of Science and Theology Terms
Dr. Hugh Ross, Ph.D.
Hugh Ross launched his career at age seven when he went to the library to find out why stars are hot. Physics and astronomy captured his curiosity and never let go. At age seventeen he was the youngest person ever to serve as director of observations for Vancouver's Royal Astronomical Society. With the help of a provincial scholarship and a National Research Council (NRC) of Canada fellowship, he completed his undergraduate degree in physics (University of British Columbia) and graduate degrees in astronomy (University of Toronto). The NRC also sent him to the United States for postdoctoral studies. At Caltech he researched quasi-stellar objects, or "quasars," some of the most distant and ancient objects in the universe.
Not all of Hugh's discoveries had to do with astrophysics. He observed with amazement the impact of describing for people the process by which he came to personal faith in Jesus Christ. Some have expressed dismay but most have been overjoyed to meet someone who started at religious ground zero and through scientific and historical reality testing, became convinced that the Bible is truly the Word of God. He was stunned to discover how many individuals believed or disbelieved without checking evidence.
Hugh's unshakable confidence that God's revelation of Himself in Scripture and nature do not, will not, and cannot contradict became his unique message. Communicating that message as broadly and clearly as possible became his mission. He scouts the frontiers of origins research to share with scientists and nonscientists alike the thrilling news of what's being discovered and how it connects with biblical theology.
Between writing books and articles and recording the weekly television program Reasons to Believe, he travels around the world challenging high school and university audiences, churches and professional groups to consider the evidence for what they believe. He presents a persuasive case for Christianity without applying pressure. Because he treats people's questions and comments with respect, he is in great demand as a speaker and as a talk-radio and television guest.
Adiabatic Expansion: A volume increase wherein cooling results from
the expansion alone, not from any loss of energy from the system.
Agnosticism: (Gk. a - no, gnosis - knowledge) Literally:
no-knowledge-ism. The view that one does not, or can not, know
ultimate reality (especially God). The position that Gods existence
cannot be determined due to an insufficiency of knowledge (thus implying
the suspension of judgment).
Albedo: The ratio of reflected light to the total amount of light
falling on a surface.
Amino Acid Residues: The essential molecular building blocks within
proteins.
Amino Acids: Organic molecules containing the amino group NH 2
and at least one carboxyl group. These acids form the basic constituents
of all proteins.
Angular Momentum: The measure of a body's tendency to continue rotating
about its axis.
Anthropic Principle: The observation that the universe has all the
necessary and narrowly-defined characteristics to make man and his sustained
existence possible. The view that the universe is conspicuously
fine-tuned for human existence.
Anthropomorphism: The act of ascribing human characteristics to non-humans
(especially to God).
Antinomy: A contradiction or inconsistency between two apparently
reasonable statements or principles.
Apologetics: (Gk. apologia - defense) The branch of Christian
theology that provides rational justification for the truth claims of
Christianity. Christian apologetics involves providing positive evidence
for the faith, answering questions or objections, as well as critiquing
alternative (non-Christian) systems of thought.
Appearance of Age: The hypothesis that God created the universe,
the earth, and life with (false) indicators of a nonexistent past. If this
hypothesis were true, scientific measurements of great age conceivably could
be reconciled with a recent-creation interpretation of certain biblical passages.
Archaeology: The scientific study of the material remains of ancient
cultures.
Atheism: (Gk. a - no, theos - God) Literally:
no-God-ism. The view that no God or gods exist. The position
that denies or rejects the existence God.
Atheist: Someone who denies the existence of a divine being.
Atonement: Satisfaction for wrongdoing or debt. In Christianity, the
saving work of Jesus Christ on the cross (specifically His death) by which
sinful human beings are restored to fellowship with their holy and just God.
Attributes of God: Qualities or characteristics that are attributed
to, or predicated of, God (e.g., all-powerful, all-knowing, everywhere present).
Autonomy: The state of being independent, self-determining, or free.
Axiom: A self-evident proposition; a statement that needs no proof
because its truth is considered obvious.
Baryons: (also known as nucleons) The heavier particles, e.g., protons
and neutrons, that make up the nucleus of an atom; any particle whose decay
products include a proton.
Beauty Principle: The proposition that the correct description of
nature is that which manifests the greatest degree of simplicity, elegance,
harmony, and consistency.
Big Bang (inflationary): The theory that the universe expands
adiabatically according to the standard equations of general relativity from
an initial state of infinite density, temperature, and pressure except
during the period from about 10 -43 to 10
-34 seconds (of the universe's existence),
when it expanded at an exponentially accelerated rate.
Big Bang (standard): The theory that the universe expands adiabatically
according to the standard equations of general relativity from an initial
state of infinite density, temperature, and pressure.
Bipedal: Characteristically walking on two feet.
Black Body Radiation: Radiation characteristic of a body that perfectly
absorbs all the radiation falling on it.
Black Hole: A massive system so centrally condensed that its force
of gravity prevents everything within it, including light, from escaping.
Causality, Principle of: Every effect must have a sufficient cause;
everything that comes into being must have a cause.
Christology: (From the Gk. Christos - Christ or Messiah) The
study of the person, nature, and work of Jesus Christ.
Church Fathers: The intellectual and spiritual leaders of the Christian
church (following the apostles) during its first 500 years. The Fathers
theological and apologetic writings were central to the expansion and development
of the Christian faith.
Closed Universe: An expanding universe with sufficient density that
gravity eventually halts the expansion and forces a collapse.
Contingent: The state of being dependent upon something else for
existence.
Continuous Creation: The hypothesis that everywhere in the universe
new matter is spontaneously and continuously being created out of nothing.
In steady state theories the rate of creation is set so that, as the universe
expands, its overall density remains a constant.
Corollary: A proposition logically derived from another that already
has been proved.
Cosmic Rays: Streams of penetrating particles that bombard the earth
from outer space. The most energetic of these particles come primarily from
supernova remnants.
Cosmological Argument: One of the traditional proofs for the existence
of God. Derived from the word cosmos (world), the argument attempts
to prove that the world requires the existence of God as its ultimate cause.
Cosmological Constant (): The term expressing a hypothesized
repulsive force. Einstein added it to his original gravitational theory to
enable the theory to predict a static, non-expanding universe. There is no
evidence, as yet, to support the existence of such a force.
Cosmology: The study of the universe as a whole, including its origin,
structure, characteristics, and development.
Coupling Constant: A number that expresses how strongly any force
interacts between two bodies.
Creatio Ex Nihilo: (Lat. phrase) Literally, creation out of
nothing. St. Augustine was the first to formulate the view that God
created the world out of nothing (without the use of preexisting matter).
The world was created purely by the creative power of God.
Creationism: The view that the world was brought into existence directly
by God, rather than through blind, naturalistic processes.
Critical Density: An average density (of the universe) that if exceeded
will cause an eventual collapse of the universe. Alexander Friedmann calculated
that figure to be about 2 x 10 -29 grams/cubic
centimeter. An average density of that value or less means that the universe
will continue to expand.
Darwinism: Of or pertaining to the views of English naturalist Charles
Darwin (1809-1882). Specifically referring to Darwins views concerning
biological evolution which, as a comprehensive theory, asserted that all
life on Earth was the product of purely natural processes.
Day - Age Theory: The theory that the creation days of Genesis (chapter
one) are actually long ages, rather than literal 24-hour periods.
de Sitter Universe: A model of the universe that appears static because
of a peculiar system of spatial coordinates and the assumption that the matter
content of the universe is zero. When the assumption that the universe contains
zero matter is corrected, the model predicts an expanding universe.
Deceleration Parameter (q
o): The term expressing
the rate by which the expansion of the universe slows down.
Deism: Belief in a God who created the world, but does not intervene
within it (God is transcendent but not immanent). This religious worldview,
which emphasizes natural law over revelation, was most popular during the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in England, France, and America.
Deist: Someone who believes in the existence of a divine being, but
a distant one, a deity who maintains no personal interaction with the creatures
he caused to come into existence.
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA): A long double strand of nucleotides
containing the genetic code that specifies and controls all the characteristics
of an organism.
Determinism: The view that everything in the universe is controlled
by previous conditions, and therefore could not be otherwise.
Deuterium: A heavy isotope of hydrogen with one neutron and one proton
in the nucleus.
Doubt: To be uncertain as to the truth of something. In a biblical
context, doubt is not the same as unbelief.
Dysteleology: Lacking a function or constructive purpose. Some argue
that parts of the universe lack function or a constructive purpose, therefore
offering evidence countering the claim that the universe was designed.
Electron: The lightest of the elementary particles that have measurable
mass. It carries a negative charge.
Empiricism: (Gk. empeiria - experience) The view
that all knowledge is acquired through five sense experience.
Entropy: A measure of the amount of energy in a disordered form (i.e.,
unavailable for work) within a system.
Enzymes: Protein-like molecules that serve as catalysts in the assembly
of amino acid chains.
Epistemology: (Gk. episteme - knowledge) The branch
of philosophy concerned with the origin, nature, limits, and validity of
knowledge.
Evidentialism: An approach to Christian apologetics which asserts
that the truth of Christianity can be verified on the basis of evidence (e.g.,
fulfilled prophecy, miracles, various philosophical and scientific proofs).
It is generally agreed that there is a point of common ground between believer
and unbeliever when it comes to argumentation and the basic facts of history
and science.
Evolution, Theistic: The view that Gods purposes are carried
out through the normal evolutionary processes found in the natural world.
Evolution, Theory of: Charles Darwins biological theory that
complex life forms have developed gradually from more primitive life forms
through the mechanism of natural selection. Natural selection serves to eliminate
unfit life forms and generates new forms through the process of mutation.
Ex Nihil Nihil Fit: (Lat. phrase) Literally, from nothing,
nothing comes. A principle of causality.
Faith: Biblically speaking, to willfully place ones confident
trust in a reliable source or person (especially God [Christ]). Biblical
faith therefore involves three things: (1) knowledge of the source, (2) assent
of the will, and (3) a commitment to trust.
Fall, The: Adam and Eves act of disobedience which resulted
in divine judgment (estrangement and separation from God). As a result of
the fall, guilt and moral corruption were passed on to the entire human race.
Falsifiable: Something that is at least theoretically open to
invalidation.
Fatalism: The view that all events are predetermined by fate and therefore
unalterable by mankind. Whatever will be will be. Often fate
is described as an impersonal and capricious force.
Finite: Having specific boundaries, limitations, or an end. Limitations
in attributes and character. Gods creation is finite. Contrasted with
infinite.
Flat Universe: A universe with a density equal to Friedmann's critical
value, a universe expanding forever at a rate just fast enough to prevent
collapse.
Foreknowledge, Divine: Gods perfect knowledge of all actual
and possible events.
Frame of Reference: The position in time and space from which
measurements and observations are made.
Free Will: The view that human choices and actions are self-caused
(i.e., uncoerced or independent of external causal factors).
Frequency: For any kind of wave, the time between peaks of successive
wave crests.
Fundamentalism: A movement that arose at the beginning of the 20th
century to reaffirm the tenets of orthodox Protestant Christianity and to
defend the faith militantly against the challenges of liberal theology, higher
criticism, and Darwinism.
General Revelation: God's expression of Himself to man through the
realm of nature (apart from special revelation).
Genome: The complete set of chromosomes necessary for reproduction.
Globular Cluster: A spherically symmetric system of stars typically
containing more than 100,000 stars.
Grace: (Gk. charis - favor or goodness)
Biblically speaking, the unmerited favor of God. The goodness and kindness
of God which is extended to undeserving mankind.
Gravitational Collapse or Contraction: The falling of matter toward
the center of a system as a result of mutual gravitational attraction.
Greenhouse Effect: The retention of heat at the earth's surface caused
by atmospheric gases such as carbon dioxide that allow short wavelength radiation
from the sun to pass through but then trap the long wavelength radiation
emitted by the earth.
Half-Life: The time required for the disintegration of half the atoms
in a sample of a radioactive isotope of an element.
Heliocentrism: The belief that the sun is the center of the solar
system.
Heresy: A belief or teaching that seriously departs from (or contradicts)
the central teaching of the Bible. An outright denial of essential Christian
doctrine.
Hermeneutics: The science of biblical interpretation.
Hesitation Model: A model for the universe wherein the value for
the cosmological constant is carefully set so that the expansion of the universe
can be halted for an arbitrary period.
Higher Criticism: Application of the methods and suppositions of
literary and form criticism to the study of the Bible. This involves critical
studies concerning the authorship, dating, form, and sources of the books
of the Bible.
Hominid: Any primate species that bears a close anatomical resemblance
and some behavioral resemblance to modern man.
Homogeneous: A system in which the component parts are identical in
their structure and characteristics.
Hubble Age: The age of the universe calculated by extrapolating the
observed expansion of the universe backward in time to the starting point.
Hubble's Constant: The observed expansion rate of the universe.
Humanism: The view that mankind is the measure of all things.
To invest mankind with supreme value.
Imago Dei: (Lat. Image of God) Mankind was created in
the image and likeness of God (Gen. 1:26-27). Though tarnished by the
fall, mankind reflects the image of God in the following respects:
personality, rationality, volition, and spirituality.
Incarnation: (Lat. carne - flesh) Literally,
becoming in flesh. The Christian doctrine that Jesus Christ,
the Second person of the Trinity, took to Himself a human nature and became
man, without in any way diminishing His deity (John 1:1,14). Jesus Christ
is one person with two distinguishable natures (divine and human).
Incompleteness Theorem: A principle derived by Kurt Gödel, which
states with incomplete information about a system, it is impossible to prove
a necessarily true theorem (i.e., a one and only one descriptive statement)
about that system.
Indubitable: Beyond all doubt; absolutely or unquestionably true.
Inerrancy: Literally, without error. In its strongest
form, a reference to the Bible being completely trustworthy in all matters
in which it speaks (including matters of faith, practice, history, and science).
The belief that the Bible, as a consequence of its divine inspiration, contains
no contradictions or errors in its original autographs.
Infinite: Without boundaries, limitations, or an end. No limitations
in attributes or character. God is infinite (perfect in attributes and
character). Contrasted with finite.
Inspiration: Biblically speaking, the process by which God moved the
biblical writers to produce the scriptural books. This divine supervision
removed the possibility of human error, but allowed the personality and style
of the various writers to be reflected. Thus the Scriptures are
theopneustos God-breathed (2 Tim. 3:16).
Isotope: Any one of two or more forms of the same element with different
atomic weights, i.e., with different numbers of neutrons.
Isotropic: Independent of direction or angle. A property is isotropic
if it is the same when viewed from any direction.
Leptons: Elementary particles that do not participate in strong nuclear
reactions, e.g., electrons, neutrinos, and photons.
Light Year: The distance light travels in one year (approximately
5.9 trillion miles or 9.5 trillion kilometers).
Logic: The branch of philosophy concerned with the principles of correct
reasoning. The science that evaluates thinking and argumentation.
Luminosity: A measure of the intensity of light emitted by an object.
Macroevolution: Evolution on a large or broad scale (change throughout
the phylum).
Materialism: The metaphysical view that all reality is reducible to,
or explainable in terms of, matter and its physical properties.
Messiah: (Literally, anointed one, Gk. Christ) The promised
Old Testament deliverer who was uniquely anointed by God to carry out the
work of redemption and usher in the Kingdom of God. The title claimed by
Jesus, and attested to by His apostles.
Microevolution: Evolution on a small or limited scale (change within
species).
Microwave Background: The radiation left over from the big bang.
This radiation follows the spectrum of a black body radiator with a temperature
of about 3° Kelvin.
Miracle: A divine intervention into the natural order of affairs
(inexplicable from a purely naturalistic viewpoint).
Missing Mass: The amount of mass, beyond what has been measured,
that would be required to eventually bring the universe collapsing in on
itself.
Modernism: Reflecting the philosophical and religious views of modern
times. Relating to Christianity, it emphasizes higher critical textual claims,
liberal theology, and a naturalistic outlook (antisupernatural bias).
Monotheism: Belief in one, and only one, God. Belief in a single personal
deity. Contrasted with polytheism.
Natural Selection: The biological concept that individuals with greater
skills in adapting to their environment (survival skills) thrive.
Natural Theology: Knowledge of God by means of the natural intellect,
apart from special revelation.
Naturalism: The view that the natural, material, and physical universe
is the only reality. The philosophy of naturalism is characterized by monism,
materialism, antisupernaturalism, scientism, and humanism.
Nebular Hypothesis: The idea that the galaxies, stars, and planets
all condensed out of an amorphous nebula of molecules and dust.
Neo-Darwinian Evolution: The hypothesis that all species of life
developed continuously by strictly natural processes from atoms to molecules
to proteins to cells to advanced organisms.
Neutrinos: A class of electrically neutral particles, with little
or no mass, that experience weak nuclear and gravitational interactions only.
Neutron: An electrically neutral elementary particle with a large
mass; one of the class of particles known as baryons.
Nihilism: The view that there is no meaning, purpose, significance,
or value in the universe.
Non-Contradiction, Law of: (A cannot equal A and non-A) One of the
fundamental laws of logic. Stated metaphysically: Something cannot
both be and not be at the same time and in the same respect. Stated
epistemologically: Two contradictory statements cannot both be true
at the same time and in the same respect.
Non-Theist: Someone who does not acknowledge the reality of a theistic
God.
Nuclear Fusion: The merging of lightweight atomic nuclei into more
massive nuclei. A small amount of the combined mass is lost because it is
converted into energy.
Nucleochronology: The age-dating of astronomical bodies from the relative
abundance of radioactive isotopes.
Nucleosynthesis: The process of forming elements from protons and
neutrons.
Olber's Paradox: The question "Why is the night sky dark if the universe
is infinitely large, infinitely old, with an infinite number of stars?"
Old Earth: The view that the earth was created billions of years
ago (approximately five billion years ago). This is part of the broader ancient
universe model. This position interprets the creation days of Genesis as
six long ages (not six consecutive 24-hour periods). Contrasted with Young
Earth.
Open Universe: A universe with a density less than (or equal to)
Friedmanns critical value. Gravity cannot prevent such a universe from
expanding forever.
Original Sin: The doctrine that the universal sinfulness of humanity
(both guilt and moral corruption) came from Adams initial sin (Gen.
3). The sinful condition of humanity was inherited from Adam.
Oscillation Model: The idea that the universe alternates between
phases of expansion and contraction.
Paleontology: The study of fossils and ancient forms of life.
Pantheism: (Gk. pan - all or every,
theos - God) Literally, all-God-ism. The view
that makes God identical with the world. All is God and God is all.
The world and God are synonymous.
Pantheist: Someone who views the universe itself as some kind of divine
being.
Paradox: Two seemingly contradictory statements or propositions, which
once resolved explain or reveal a more fundamental truth.
Peptide Bond: The linking of a carboxyl group from one amino acid
to an amino group of another acid with the resultant release of a water molecule.
Perfect Cosmological Principle: The assumption that the mean density
of matter in the universe is constant.
Photon: The smallest unit of light energy capable of existing
independently.
Planck Time: The moment 10 -43 seconds
after the big bang creation event. For any time before this moment, gravity
affects all physical processes.
Polytheism: (Gk. polus - much or many,
theos - God) Literally, many-gods-ism. The
belief in many (more than one) gods or deities.
Predestination: To foreordain. The sovereign decision and decree of
God to determine the destiny of all souls. Gods eternal selection of
certain individuals for salvation (election).
Presuppositionalism: An approach to apologetics that asserts that
the starting point of any appropriate Christian apologetic involves the
acceptance of: (1) The existence of the Triune God, and (2) the infallible
authority of Scripture. This view allows for no neutral ground between believer
and unbeliever concerning the facts of history. Neutrality is not possible
because of the believers fallen noetic condition, and because all facts
must be interpreted within the framework of the larger biblical revelation.
This approach is closely tied to the Reformed thinker Cornelius Van Til.
Primeval Atom: A single, gigantic atom which, as it disintegrated,
became the present universe.
Protogalaxy: A galaxy in its formative stages of development.
Proton: A positively charged elementary particle with a large mass,
also one of the baryons.
Protostar: A star in its formative stages.
Pulsar: The collapsed core that remains from a supernova explosion.
A pulsar rotates so rapidly (typically about once a second) that energy
associated with its magnetic field bursts forth once every rotation period.
Quantum Gravity: Physical theories now being designed to cope with
conditions before the universe was 10 -43
seconds old. At 10 -43 seconds, the force
of gravity within the universe becomes comparable to the strong nuclear force.
At such a magnitude, gravity may be modified by quantum mechanical effects.
Quantum Mechanics: The realm of micro phenomena in which energy is
not infinitely divisible and the micro phenomena possess both wave and particle
characteristics.
Quantum Tunneling: The process by which quantum particles penetrate
barriers that are insurmountable to classical objects.
Quasars: The most powerfully radiant objects in the universe, typically
emitting more energy than a thousand normal galaxies from a volume only one
trillionth that of a normal galaxy.
Reconstructionism: A doctrinal system combining Puritan beliefs about
law, politics, and Biblical end-times events with the beliefs of
presuppositionalism.
Redshift (doppler): A shifting of the spectral lines of a radiating
body toward longer wavelengths in direct proportion to the velocity at which
that body moves away from the observer.
Redshift (gravitational): A shifting of the spectral lines of a radiating
body toward longer wavelengths caused, in this case, by the gravitational
field of that body.
Relativity, Special: A physical theory derived from the combined
propositions that 1) there is no observable absolute motion, only relative
motion, and 2) the velocity of light is constant and independent of the motion
of the source.
Relativity, General: An extension of special relativity theory to
include the effects of gravity on matter, energy, space, and time.
Revelation, General: Revelation of God made available to all people
through the created order.
Revelation, Special: Revelation of God through a special source (Moses,
Jesus Christ, the Bible).
Revelation: God revealing or unveiling Himself. The self disclosure
of God.
Ribonucleic Acid (RNA): A molecule composed of long chains of phosphate
and sugar ribose along with several bases. One form is used by the cell to
transfer information from DNA for assembling proteins.
Ribosome: An organic particle, composed of RNA and certain proteins,
used by cells to manufacture other proteins.
Runaway Freezing: The cycle that begins when cooler temperatures
result in increased snow and ice, which in turn cause more sunlight to reflect
away from a planet's surface, further lowering the temperature and causing
still more snow and ice to form, etc. until the whole surface is frozen.
Scientific Method: A method of empirical inquiry involving prediction,
observation, and experimentation (a framework of restraint).
Secularism: An age without God or religion.
Sin: (Gk. hamartia - sin) Anything contrary to
the will or commands of God. The Bible defines sin variously as an affront
to God, to miss the mark, unrighteousness, Godlessness, and especially
lawlessness.
Single Revelation Theology: The belief that God reveals Himself reliably
only through Scripture.
Singularity: An infinitely shrunken space representing the boundary
at which space ceases to exist or at which space comes into existence.
Skepticism: To doubt, question, or suspend judgment on philosophical
and/or religious issues. In a strict philosophical sense, to deny that true
knowledge is attainable.
Sovereignty of God: The view that makes God the absolute ruler and
controller of all things. A reference to the absolute authority of God.
Space-Time Manifold: The four-dimensional continuum of space and
time in which all the physical realities of the universe exist.
Special Creation: The doctrine that God personally intervened in
the natural order to produce things that did not previously exist and that
could not be produced by natural processes alone.
Specific Entropy: The amount of photon entropy per individual proton,
an amount that approximately equals the ratio of photons to baryons.
Steady State Model: The hypothesis that the universe, though expanding
indefinitely, takes on an unchanging and eternal quality since the voids
that result from expansion are filled by the continual spontaneous generation
of new matter.
Stellar Evolution: The processes by which stars condense out of
primordial clouds, ignite nuclear burning processes, exhaust their nuclear
fuel, and end their existence either in some kind of explosion or as a slowly
dying cinder.
Strings: Tubelike configurations of energy that may have formed 10
-34 seconds after the creation of the universe
and may have subsequently served as the condensation centers for galaxy
formation.
Supernatural: The realm above or beyond the natural, physical world.
Supernova: The cataclysmic explosion of a massive star in which most
of the star is blown off into interstellar space.
Teleological Argument: (Gk. teleos - end or
purpose) A proof for the existence of God. The argument stated:
Design requires a designer. The universe exhibits evidence of complex design.
Therefore, the universe was designed by a cosmic architect (God). This argument
has been advocated by many thinkers (Plato, St. Thomas Aquinas), but its
most popular version was expressed by William Paley (the watchmaker
argument).
Theism: (From Gk. theos - God) The worldview that
affirms the existence of an infinite, eternal, and personal God, who is the
transcendent creator, and immanent sustainer of the world. Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam are considered theistic religions.
Theist: Someone who believes that one divine being not only exists
but also reveals Himself as the creator and ruler of the universe.
Theodicy: The problem of evil. An attempt to justify the goodness
of God in light of evil.
Theology: (Gk. theos - God, logos -
study) The study of God. Rational discourse about God.
Transcendence of God: God being beyond, independent of, or distinct
from, the time-space world.
Transcendent: Existing beyond and apart from the limits of the material
universe.
Trinity: The Christian concept of God. The one true God exists eternally
and simultaneously as three distinguishable persons: Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit.
Uncertainty Principle: The principle first stated by Wemer Heisenberg
that the uncertainty in the position of a particle multiplied by the
uncertainty in the velocity of that particle must be greater than
a specified number.
Usshers Chronology: A hypothesized calendar of biblical events
based on the assumption that no generations were omitted from the genealogies
and that the numbered days of the Genesis creation account were consecutive,
24-hour periods.
Virial Theorem: A theorem (applicable to point sources) that enables
one to calculate either the dispersal time for star clusters whose total
mass is insufficiently condensed for gravitational containment or the time
required for the stars of more condensed clusters to assume randomized
velocities.
Virtual Particle: A particle created and destroyed in so short a
time that violations of energy conservation (in its creation) cannot be detected.
Wavelength: For any kind of wave, the distance between the peaks (or
crests) of successive waves.
Worldview: A conceptual framework for interpreting reality. An attempt
to arrange ones most basic beliefs into a coherent system that can
serve to evaluate and interpret reality. A comprehensive outlook on life.
Young Earth: The view that the earth was created several thousand
years ago (possibly as recent as six to ten thousand years ago). This is
part of the broader young universe model. This position interprets the creation
days of Genesis as six, consecutive 24-hour periods. Contrasted with Old
Earth.
© Reasons To Believe
This page, and all contents, are Copyright © by Reasons To Believe.
Copyright (c) Reasons to Believe. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Comments? Feedback? Article or website submission?
Please contact us.
Email this to a friend
Home |
Our Focus |
Search |
What's New |
Intelligent Design |
Theism |
Darwinism & Evolution |
Atheism |
Interviews |
Book Reviews |
Special Interest |
Debates |
Related Links |
Mere Creation Site |
Leadership U.
copyright (c)
1995-2002 Leadership U. All rights reserved.
This site is part of the Telling the Truth Project.
Updated: 14 December 2002
|