Lewis's journey took him from a position sharply hostile to arguments for design to views bearing remarkable similarities to those advocated by ID proponents like William Dembski.
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It would be wrong to conclude that his acceptance of some kind of human evolution placed him in the camp of mainstream evolutionary biology, or even mainstream theistic evolution.
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Mark Shea, a blogger for the National Catholic Register, holds forth on why some Thomistic philosophers look askance at claims of intelligent design in biology.
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Evolution has so many different meanings that if one doesn't pay close attention, a conversation on the topic will quickly devolve into people talking past one another.
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Alfred Wallace would come to see in human beings something special, unique in the natural world, far and away qualitatively different from anything else in the animal kingdom.
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That was a very successful evening when Dennis Prager, a good friend of Discovery Institute, got together with Discovery fellows Stephen Meyer, Michael Medved and George Gilder.
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