beetles-of-alfred-russel-wallace Type post Author Michael Flannery Date October 16, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Abrahamic religions, Alfred Russel Wallace, Andrew Berry, brain, Charles Darwin, Corinthians, Darwinism (book), Edinburgh, Ernst Haeckel, frenemies, Genesis, George Romanes, Harvard University, historiography, human consciousness, Jacques Barzun, John Lukacs, Man’s Place in the Universe, materialism, natural theology, Nature's Prophet, Notebook C, Phillip E. Johnson, Plinian Society, Psalms, Romans, Scripture, Social Environment and Moral Progress, teleology, The American Scholar, The Wedge of Truth, The World of Life Wallace’s Frenemies: A Lesson from Phillip Johnson Michael Flannery October 16, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 We can add Andrew Berry to the list of those quick to praise Alfred Wallace on certain matters but equally quick to condemn him on others. Read More ›
beetles-of-alfred-russel-wallace Type post Author Michael Flannery Date November 20, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , __edited, Abrahamic religions, Alfred Russel Wallace, Andrew Berry, brain, Charles Darwin, Corinthians, Darwinism (book), Edinburgh, Ernst Haeckel, frenemies, Genesis, George Romanes, Harvard University, historiography, human consciousness, Jacques Barzun, John Lukacs, Man’s Place in the Universe, materialism, natural theology, Nature's Prophet, Notebook C, Phillip E. Johnson, Plinian Society, Psalms, Romans, Scripture, Social Environment and Moral Progress, teleology, The American Scholar, The Wedge of Truth, The World of Life Wallace’s Frenemies: A Lesson from Phillip Johnson Michael Flannery November 20, 2019 Evolution, Faith & Science 7 We can add Andrew Berry to the list of those quick to praise Alfred Wallace on certain matters but equally quick to condemn him on others. Read More ›
human pair Type post Author Ann Gauger Date November 1, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceGeneticsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __k-review, Abrahamic religions, Adam and the Genome, Africa, BioLogos, bottleneck, Dennis Venema, evolution, Francis Collins, heterozygosity, human origins, linkage disequilibrium, London, population genetics, population size, Queen Mary University, Richard Buggs, Trinity Western University Is a First Human Pair Possible or Impossible? Ann Gauger November 1, 2017 Evolution, Faith & Science, Genetics, Human Origins and Anthropology 11 Richard Buggs, Reader at Queen Mary University of London, is a well-respected geneticist, with numerous papers published in molecular ecology, genomics, and molecular evolution. Read More ›