Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 485 | Discovering Design in Nature

military cemetery
Photo credit: Kent Rebman via Unsplash.

Richard Weikart on Michael Ruse’s “Compromise” with Christianity

Michael Ruse aims at a surprising conclusion in his new book. Weikart isn’t buying it. Read More ›
biology classroom

When Biologists Speak to Biology Teachers

Why should the reality be hidden from young people? Or from teachers? Read More ›
Conus_catus 2

A Snail as Fast as a Bullet, and Other Darwin-Defying Marvels

You could fill up a web publication’s daily coverage just with new wonders from the world of life. Would that be expected given Darwinian assumptions? Read More ›
human-evolution

From The Atlantic on Teaching Human Evolution, a Bit of Rare Honesty in Reporting

With permission from John West and Sarah Chaffee, here is the full text of their interview with staff writer Olga Khazan. Read More ›
Richrard-Sternberg

Richard Sternberg: Intelligent Design “Through the Eyes of a Platonist”

“There has to be something in addition to just the DNA sequences alone that explains development.” Read More ›
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Walnuts: Intelligent Design in a Nutshell — Literally

Walnut shells are found to create 3-D puzzles with tissues that even toothy squirrels can’t easily crack. Read More ›
Melanie-Phillips

Melanie Phillips, Pro-Sanity Journalist, on David Gelernter’s Darwin Apostasy 

Phillips draws a helpful parallel between intolerant leftism, in command in our culture now, and the evolutionism that similarly will tolerate no challenges. Read More ›
Atacama-Desert

With an Assist from Nature, DNA Travels the Globe

Life makes its way around the world using nonliving transportation systems, seeding the world with complex specified information. Read More ›
Ritalin

How Is Darwin’s Idea Dangerous? John West Counts the Ways

Dr. West details the landscape of the cultural, moral, legal, even medical “landmarks” that have been worn away under the influence of evolutionary thinking. Read More ›

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