Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 216 | Discovering Design in Nature

St.-Patricks-Cathedral
Photo credit: Jean-Christophe BENOIST, CC BY 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Meyer, Murray, Holland: Join the Conversation about Faith and Science

“We all sense that there is more than blind, pitiless indifference at work, and I think wrestling with that is the thing we all should be doing.” Read More ›
runner
Photo credit: Braden Collum via Unsplash.

Wesley J. Smith Asks, Is Your Body “Engineered”?

Or did it evolve through impersonal and random processes over countless millions of years of natural selection? Read More ›
Hyraxes
Photo: Titanohyrax andrewsi, Oligocene, Egypt, after Tabuce 2016 fig. 2, fair use.

Fossil Friday: Fossil Hyraxes and the Abrupt Origin of Hyracoidea

Of course, it is only we “nitpicking” intelligent design proponents who point out such incongruences. Read More ›
Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin
Photo: Charles Darwin in 1855, by Maull and Polyblank, Literary and Scientific Portrait Club, via Wikimedia Commons.

Remembering Paul Johnson’s Assessment of Darwin

The reviewers that insist this work is “ludicrous,” a “smear,” or a “hatchet job” are wrong; it is none of these. Read More ›
The End
Photo credit: Crawford Jolly via Unsplash.

Is the End of Science Near?

A study in the premier science journal notes the long term falling off of truly original findings, as opposed to endless citations of others’ findings. Read More ›
elephant
Photo credit: Coralie Mercier, via Flickr (cropped).

More Evolution by Devolution: Mammalian Hairlessness

The mechanism of Darwinian evolution absolutely works — by breaking genes, when that provides a selective advantage, or turning them off. Read More ›
Michael Egnor
Photo: Michael Egnor, by Nathan Jacobson.

A Neurosurgeon and an Engineer Explore Your Body’s Intelligent Design

Dr. Michael Egnor makes the surprising confession that his medical library is full of engineering texts. Read More ›
Pacific salmon
Photo credit: Milton Love, Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

Appreciating the Irreducibly Complex Design of Salmon Osmoregulation

Three main things must occur for the young salmon, called a smolt, to prepare for life in the salty ocean. Read More ›
capuchin monkey
Photo credit: Tiago Falótico, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Monkeys, Not Humans, Likely Made Ancient Brazilian Tools

The stone objects, dated from 50,000 years ago, look like the ones made by capuchin monkeys today. Read More ›
Gustaf_Adolfskyrkan_2010
Photo credit: I99pema, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Does God Exist? Stephen Meyer and “New New Atheists” in Discussion

As Meyer says, isn't there something “unstable” about being “pro-“ any faith that you don’t also affirm in objective terms, “that it really happened”? Read More ›

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