c9c8b21e-32ed-403f-a2af-45f6d02255bc1062x1159 Type post Author William A. Dembski Date August 20, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , advice, Alexander Oparin, amino acids, Baltimore, biopolymers, building blocks, chemistry, computer languages, Dave Keeling, Deep Ocean Raman In Situ Spectrometer, DNA, education, Edward Anders, Edward T. Peltzer, extraterrestrial life, geology, Gustaf Arrhenius, Harold Urey, homochirality, hydrothermal vents, Jeffrey Bada, Klingons, lipid world, Mars, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, ocean chemistry, oceanography, organic chemistry, origin of life, Pope, prebiotic conditions, prebiotic soup, proteins, public school, racemization, RNA, RNA world, Roman Catholicism, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, solar system, Stanley Miller, starches, sugars, surface-based chemistry, theistic evolution, UC San Diego, University of Chicago, University of Heidelberg, Vulcans Interview with Edward Peltzer on the Origin of Life William A. Dembski August 20, 2025 Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 70 A student of Stanley Miller and Jeffrey Bada explains the failure of materialistic origin-of-life scenarios. Read More ›
Adolf-Grünbaum Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 22, 2020 CategoriesPhilosophy of Science Tagged , Adolf Grünbaum, advice, Andrew McDiarmid, atheism, dialogue, friendship, graduate students, ID the Future, intelligent design, Paul Nelson, podcast, tributes, truth-seeking, University of Pittsburgh, William Blake The Atheist Who Helped Shape Intelligent Design David Klinghoffer June 22, 2020 Philosophy of Science 1 It’s wonderful to remember mentors who helped shaped us, often in ways that might have surprised the influential person if he’d known about it beforehand. Read More ›
Stephen Meyer Type post Date September 3, 2019 CategoriesScience Education Tagged , __edited, academy, advice, Beatris Rusu, Center for Science and Culture, Darwin's Doubt, Discovery Institute, education, graduate students, ID the Future, intelligent design, philosophical naturalism, podcast, Stephen Meyer “Be Cautious, but Not Too Cautious”: Stephen Meyer’s Advice to Science Students Science and Culture September 3, 2019 Science Education 1 Talking with host Beatris Rusu, Dr. Meyer encourages students to recognize how pervasive philosophical naturalism is in the academy. Read More ›
typing 2 Type post Date March 1, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEvolution Tagged , __k-review, advice, data, evolution, evolutionary theory, intelligent design, nature, paper, publication, Research, science, scientists How to Write a First-Class Biology Paper Science and Culture March 1, 2018 Biology, Evolution 1 Here is how to guarantee publication of your scientific research article in a biology journal. Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 4, 2016 CategoriesBioethicsLegal Science (jurisprudence)Medicine Tagged , __tedited, advice, assisted suicide, cooperation, culture of death, euthanasia, Health & Wellness, legalization What to Do if You Live in a Jurisdiction with Legalized Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia Wesley J. Smith May 4, 2016 Bioethics, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Medicine 2 Just because something is legal doesn't mean it's right. Read More ›