Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 566 | Discovering Design in Nature

cheetah

Brian Miller Pets a Cheetah, an Icon of Intelligent Design

For your Labor Day enjoyment, Brian submits this photo of himself with Annabelle. Read More ›
robot

Bill Dembski on the AI Boogeyman, and the Real AI Danger

“The real worry,” Dembski says, “isn’t that we’ll raise machines to our level, but that we’ll lower humanity to the level of machines.” 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 ›
BHS students visit German counterparts

Smithsonian Misrepresents Evolution to AP Biology Students

Basically, it’s a how-to guide for sugarcoating evolutionary dogma in the science classroom. Read More ›
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From Darwin’s Rhapsody, to The Blob

A friend recommends this passage from biologist Wayne Rossiter’s book Shadow of Oz for its delightful analogy. Read More ›
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Darwin’s Rhapsody

“Evolution” in its deepest sense is a foundational metaphysical commitment, not a scientific theory that one could test. Read More ›
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Membrane Channels Show Astonishing Specificity

The “selectivity filters” in membrane channels of living cells are able to discriminate between very similar molecules or atoms using complex mechanisms. Read More ›
EPSON DSC picture

Euthanasia’s Moral Abyss — Belgian Edition

The carnage so bloodlessly described in the Belgian report demonstrates vividly the consequences to a society when it generally accepts killing as a proper answer to human suffering. Read More ›

From Charles Darwin, a Wonderful Lesson in Character

If such a break between old colleagues happened now, the results would likely be very different. Read More ›

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