zebra finches Type post Author Ann Gauger Date June 29, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, aesthetics, anthropomorphizing, balance, BBC Earth, beauty, birds, elegance, harmony, peacock, proportion, sexual selection, UC Irvine, zebra finch Do Animals Recognize Beauty? Ann Gauger June 29, 2018 Intelligent Design 4 One must separate beauty from mate choice in order to tell if animals recognize beauty. Read More ›
hurdles Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date April 18, 2018 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, adaptability, aesthetics, bad design, blood pressure, brain, disease, evolution, Heretic: One Scientist’s Journey from Darwin to Design, Howard Glicksman, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk, logical fallacy, Matti Leisola, Nathan Lents, Neo-Darwinism, redundancy, Richard Dawkins, robustness Your “Botched Body”: Bad Design or Bad Logic? Steve Laufmann April 18, 2018 Anatomy, Engineering, Intelligent Design 5 Whenever a complex system of systems works at all, it seems counterproductive to attempt a “bad design” argument. Read More ›
dog in cup Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date March 4, 2018 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , __k-review, advance directive, aesthetics, animal rights, bioethics.net, CPR, dog, Human, litigation, pets, speciesism Should EMTs Save a Human or a Dog First? Wesley J. Smith March 4, 2018 Bioethics 3 Bioethicists never cease to entertain — if some of the dangerous views pushed by this mainstream movement can be considered “entertaining.” Read More ›
George_Richmond_-_Emma_Darwin_-_1840 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 2, 2014 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionFaith & SciencePhilosophy Tagged , __k-review, aesthetics, beauty, Brad Pitt, Charles Darwin, Emma Darwin, Great Britain, materialism, New Atheists, nothing buttery, poetry, Princeton University Press, Roger Scruton, Roman Catholic, Views, William Shakespeare The Sagacity of Emma Darwin David Klinghoffer May 2, 2014 Bioethics, Evolution, Faith & Science, Philosophy 6 In a review of Roger Scruton's new book, Laura Keynes commends the wisdom of her ancestor, Mrs. Darwin. Read More ›