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For other authors named Henry M. Morris, see the disambiguation page.

Henry M. Morris (1) has been aliased into Henry Madison Morris.

70+ Works 8,039 Members 29 Reviews 2 Favorited

Series

Works by Henry M. Morris

Works have been aliased into Henry Madison Morris.

Men of Science, Men of God (1988) 695 copies, 1 review
Scientific Creationism (1974) 633 copies, 1 review
Many Infallible Proofs (1974) 469 copies, 1 review
The Remarkable Record of Job [Videorecording] (1988) 383 copies, 2 reviews
What Is Creation Science? (1982) 364 copies, 2 reviews
The Bible Has the Answer (1971) 356 copies
The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth (1972) 192 copies, 4 reviews
The Bible and Modern Science (1956) 185 copies, 2 reviews
Studies in the Bible and Science (1966) 147 copies, 1 review
The God Who Is Real [Videorecording] (1988) 120 copies, 1 review
Defender's Study Bible (1995) 103 copies, 1 review
Creation and the Modern Christian (1985) 85 copies, 1 review
A Symposium on Creation (1968) 84 copies
God and the Nations (2003) 65 copies
Defending the Faith (1999) 64 copies
For Time And Forever (2005) 49 copies
That You Might Believe (1985) 48 copies
Days to Remember (2005) 34 copies
King of Creation (1980) 34 copies
Creation and Its Critics (1982) 26 copies
Evidences for Creation (1969) 3 copies

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into Henry Madison Morris.

Darwin (Norton Critical Edition) (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 714 copies, 4 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

32 reviews
This is a quick read yet in typical Morris fashion, it’s packed with depth and detail. This is a great start for anyone interested in creationism and apologetics.
The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth by Henry M. Morris was next. This 100 (ish) page book was written by a creationist that is (or was) an engineer by training. I enjoyed a lot of this little book and I also see his Christian bias. Dr. Morris values the complexity of God’s creation, values natural laws and how those are opposite of what is claimed in evolution. He takes a look at space and always comes back to the creationist perspective. There is an obvious worldview laid down in this show more book and he often talks about “the bias” of evolution and their interpretations but is doing the same thing with the creationists side of the issue. We cannot get away from interpretation. I think he did a fine job with what he was trying to do. I’d give this book 3 out of 5 stars. show less
Pseudo-science. Probably, not worth your time unless you want verification that the purpose of creation science is to foster teaching religion in public schools.
Very good, concise arguments. I like that he incorporates 2 Peter 3 into the last chapter!

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
70
Also by
1
Members
8,039
Popularity
#3,013
Rating
3.8
Reviews
29
ISBNs
121
Languages
4
Favorited
2

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