Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 623 | Discovering Design in Nature

Boy with a Broken Egg
three-parent baby
Image: "Boy with a Broken Egg," 1756, by Jean-Baptiste Greuze [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

First State-Sanctioned Three-Parent Babies to be Born

The children could have serious health consequences — either early or later in life — having been generated, after all, from two broken eggs. Read More ›
Darwin Shrewsbury (1)

A.N. Wilson and the Religious Nature of Darwinism

Wilson's biography sounds like appropriate reading for the holy day of Darwin, which is hardly more than a week away. Read More ›
Wilson Darwin

A.N. Wilson Is Right: “Darwin Was Wrong”

I enjoyed Wilson's book, and I learned a lot from it. But this biography’s most interesting feature is its firm rejection of Darwin’s theory of evolution. Read More ›
Dickinsonia

Cambrian Explosion Blues

Here’s a sampling of the latest speculations about the Cambrian explosion. Read More ›
Macaque-monkey

Macaque Monkeys and Human Dignity

Why does the evolution debate matter so intensely? Read More ›
Weikart 1

Michael Medved and Richard Weikart Lay Bare the Evolutionary Roots of Nazism

Weikart, a meticulous scholar, traces the connection in his book From Darwin to Hitler, demonstrating that Darwin’s theory is tainted at its origins. Read More ›
Tom Cruise

Free Will Denial and PreCrimes

If we treat criminals the way we treat natural disasters — as physical events without moral culpability — the pragmatic approach is preemption as well. Read More ›
Self-Refutation

Naturalism and Self-Refutation

How much does Gödel’s incompleteness theorem weigh? What is the physics of non-contradiction? How many millimeters long is Tom Clark’s argument for naturalism? Read More ›

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