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> As much as many of us are averse to the Creation Museum, it would seem to me
> based on the evidence at hand, one cannot say it is not a museum. We may not
> like the content or what is being portrayed, but we cannot counter the fact
> that it is a museum and has a right to exist . . .
>
> OR CAN WE? I leave that to you guys to duke out.
In the visual arts, the difference between a gallery or kunsthalle and a
museum is that a museum acquires, houses, and researches an ongoing
collection. Putting artifacts on public view is only a part of its mission.
From its website, I cannot see thqt the Creation Museum does any of those
things -- it's more like a pop-up book illustrating Bible stories. If it's
a museum, so is Walt Disney World.
The Creation Museum wants to appear as if it is a natural history museum,
which is just a masquerade to give the impression of being scientifically
credible. Without doing any of the things a real natural history museum
does, it perpetuates a fraud -- like all of Creationism's attempts to appear
scientific. It's an odd irony that a system of thought which so vilifies
science, nonetheless yearns for its stamp of approval.
/s
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