Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
Summer Seminar
Photo: Natural backdrop for this year's Summer Seminar, by Emily Sandico.
Latest

The Rocks Cry Out — Looking Back on My Year

Categories
Faith & Science
Intelligent Design
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

We enjoyed our staff Christmas lunch yesterday at Ivar’s in downtown Seattle, and a number of colleagues spoke movingly about highlights of the past year. As I considered this year, my first at the Center for Science and Culture, two highlights came immediately to my mind. 

First, the sheer joy of being surrounded by colleagues whose incredibly sharp minds are all turned toward a singular goal: “to advance a culture of purpose, creativity, and innovation.” At Discovery Institute we believe that “mind, not matter, is the source and crown of creation.” Before I came to Discovery, my work in the corporate world felt empty at times. But that’s all changed! As part of the Center for Science and Culture, together with my colleagues and oft-unsung leadership, I am delighted to help tell the world about the evidence that we live in a created universe imbued with meaning, not on a mere speck in a vast cosmic accident.

Attesting to the Mind Behind the Design

The second highlight of my year was the opportunity to attend our yearly five-day Summer Seminar in Colorado Springs, CO. Outdoors, the spectacular geologic formations around the conference center — the very rocks — seemed to cry out in attestation of the mind whose design we see evidenced in nature. Indoors, thanks to the gifts of our wonderful supporters, fifty of the brightest and most highly motivated students from scientific and other disciplines heard from and talked with our top scientists. They evaluated the evidence for intelligent design, asked highly sophisticated questions, articulated their beliefs, expanded their networks, and were equipped to advance the intelligent design movement, and a culture of purpose, wherever the future takes them. Many will go into science and other fields of professional scholarship, and they will change the world. It was thrilling to see.  

Our work is the very opposite of empty, and you have made it possible. This year, would you consider supporting the Center for Science and Culture, to keep all this going strong — even stronger! — in 2024? Your gift means that you, too, can help advance a culture of purpose in a universe full of meaning. Thank you!

Emily Sandico

Special Projects Coordinator and Senior Fellow, Center for Science and Culture
Emily Sandico is a Senior Fellow with Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, where she also serves as Special Projects Coordinator. She holds bachelor’s degrees in philosophy and education from Whitworth University and a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Washington State University. She spent 14 years at a major Silicon Valley tech firm, where she worked as a technical editor and product manager, and as a liaison for Fortune 500 clients and the firm’s software development organization, sales force, and technical consultants around the world. Dr. Sandico is a licensed veterinarian with a special interest in how the study of medicine informs our understanding of design in biology. As a citizen and a scientist, she is most interested in helping people to seek truth by building a culture that fosters personal liberty, intellectual honesty, academic freedom, and scientific rigor.
Benefiting from Science & Culture Today?
Support the Center for Science and Culture and ensure that we can continue to publish counter-cultural commentary and original reporting and analysis on scientific research, evolution, neuroscience, bioethics, and intelligent design.

© Discovery Institute