Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 564 | Discovering Design in Nature

sinuses

Nathan Lents Is Back; Still Wrong About Sinuses 

The interaction with Lents is of interest because it provides an opportunity to look again, in some detail, at a fascinating illustration of design in action. Read More ›
Weikart Medved

Weikart, Medved: Getting to the Bottom of “Hitler’s Religion”

You think Adolf Hitler is dead? In a physical sense, yes, but he lives on in ludicrous comparisons that political and cultural partisans seem unable to stop themselves from making. Read More ›
Badwater Ultramarathon

Origin of Long-Distance Running — More Evolution by Breaking Things

A central problem for theories of unguided evolution has always been the challenge of building complex biological novelties. Read More ›
Print

Ignoring Other Research, New Study Explains (Away) the Origin of New Body Plans

Recently, a team of British paleontologists added a new pseudo-explanation. Read More ›
Marvin Olasky

Olasky at Discovery Institute: Intelligent Design and the Anthropology of Homelessness

What’s the pivot that turns us toward more traditional solutions, versus the wrongly named “progressive” ones? 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 ›
Darwin statue

Once Again, About the Word “Darwinism”

A evolutionist complains, “They try to use ‘Darwinist’ like an albatross linking evolution to Darwin’s Victorian white supremacy.” Read More ›
Ota_Benga_at_Bronx_Zoo

On a Grim Anniversary, Shocking Documentary Human Zoos Now Available on Amazon

This was supposed to be of scientific interest, educating visitors in the evolutionary doctrine that placed Africans in close relationship to apes. Read More ›
luca-baggio-211858 2

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 ›

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