Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
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Faith & Science

Western Wall

Discovery Insiders Tour, Israel 2019: Discover the Ancient Roots of Today’s Profoundest Debates

It’s the chance of a lifetime to travel with and learn from some of the stars of Discovery Institute. Read More ›
Denis

Denis Lamoureux on the God-of-the-Gaps Fallacy

The universe is like a musical instrument that was designed to interact with its designer. Read More ›
A Deist in Christian Clothing?

A Deist in Christian Clothing?

Denis Lamoureux unwittingly encourages Christians to embrace not a meaningful dialogue between faith and science but a self-imposed intellectual captivity. Read More ›

Response to Swamidass: Sniffing at 700+ Citations of Mainstream Scientific Literature

He focuses on one subtopic of one chapter, dismissing the rest of the scientific content of the book as failing to engage with mainstream science. Read More ›
mouse

Response to Swamidass: Rats, Mice, and Discrepant Molecular Clocks

Molecular clocks are a relatively simple concept. Read More ›
Beautiful Monster

Response to Swamidass: Confusion in a Review of Theistic Evolution

It’s worth engaging him, since Swamidass is the relatively rare critic of ID who works at tackling arguments for design in a substantive fashion. Read More ›
sunrise

On Rosh Hashanah, a Note on Origins and Evidence

The origin and nature of man should be important to any thoughtful human being, of any religion or none. Read More ›
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Why Thomas Aquinas Would Have Loved Intelligent Design

As for criticism that ID is a “God of the Gaps” argument, Michael Chaberek urges Thomists to consider where that complaint leads. Read More ›
Mike Keas

Unbelievable: Debunking Science and Faith Myths with Historian Mike Keas

Praising science as way to implicitly, or explicitly, club religion over the head is a familiar feature of our culture. It’s not new, either. Read More ›
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Aquinas, Chaberek, Richards: A Cleansing Conversation

Our culture is both degraded and degrading. No doubt the caustic effects of some trends in scientific thought — about biological origins, for example — have played a part in that. What can we do about it? Read More ›

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