Not really. It only further muddies the waters because it's yet another example of lack of consistency among creationists on the subject.
Like the Pluto controversy? like how we got our moon? those sorts of things?
pitabread said:
If you really want to believe that "kind = genus", fine, but then you're accepting it's an inherently artificial category with no true biological reality.
Which came first? the artificial, or the real?
As I pointed out, "kind" came first.
Then it got plutoed to "genus".
And "genus," as you know, has a myriad of choices to choose from.
Here they are again:
From the online etymology dictionary:
genus (n.)
(Latin plural genera), 1550s as a term of logic, "
kind or class of things" (biological sense dates from c. 1600), from Latin genus (genitive generis) "race, stock,
kind; family, birth, descent, origin," from suffixed form of PIE root *gene- "give birth, beget," with derivatives referring to procreation and familial and tribal groups.
Look at your choices:
- race
- stock
- kind
- family
- birth
- descent
- origin
Thanks, Latin, now you know why I'm KJVO, don't you?
pitabread said:
Which is of course contrary to what most creationists try to claim.
Well it seems to me like people are trying very hard to keep that claim intact, since it muddies the waters so badly.
I'm sure academia would hate to see the term localized to just one word: "kind".
But then, even if 100% of the Christian population would agree that kind = genus, that wouldn't mean a thing, would it?
After all, there is 100% agreement among Christians that, "In the beginning, God ...", and it doesn't mean a thing.
pitabread said:
Ya'll need to clean up your own pool before peeing in everyone else's.
"My pool" has the correct word from the get-go.
Until academia came along, Latinized it, giving it six other choices to choose from, and now claims the original term is ... how did you put it?
"Inherently artificial category with no true biological reality."
Academia doing what it does best: diluting the word of God.