Prophetess of Health In 1976, while still a lecturer at
Loma Linda University, he published the book
Prophetess of Health. The book is about the relationship between Seventh-day Adventist Church co-founder and prophetess
Ellen G. White and popular ideas about health that were fashionable in certain circles in America just prior to the time during which she wrote her books.
The Creationists In 1992, he published
The Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism, a history of the origins of
anti-evolutionism. It was revised and expanded in 2006, with the subtitle changed to
From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design. The book has been described as "probably the most definitive history of anti-evolutionism". It has received generally favorable reviews from both the academic and the religious community. Former
archbishop of York John Habgood described it, in an article in
The Times, as a "massively well-documented history" that "must surely be the definitive study of the rise and growth of" creationism.
Galileo Goes to Jail and Other Myths About Science and Religion In 2009, he was editor for
Galileo Goes to Jail and Other Myths About Science and Religion, where the book focuses on popular misconceptions that are connected between science and religion. Among other things the work seeks to debunk various claims, such as that the medieval Christian Church suppressed science, that medieval Islamic culture was inhospitable to science, that the Church issued a universal ban on human dissection in the Middle Ages, that
Galileo Galilei was imprisoned and tortured for advocating Copernicanism, or that the idea of creationism is a uniquely American phenomenon. ==Bibliography==