Lake District Type post Author Neil Thomas Date November 5, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & Science Tagged , Alexander Pope, bestseller, Charles Darwin, George Eliot, Harriet Martineau, John Stuart Mill, Lake District, nature, poets, tourists, transcendence, Victorian England, William Wordsworth, Wordsworth versus Darwin (series) Wordsworth: The Sage of the Lakes Neil Thomas November 5, 2022 Bioethics, Faith & Science 3 Wordsworth gave rise not just to a minority group of high-culture admirers but to a popular revolution in ordinary people’s thinking. Read More ›
Statue_of_C.S._Lewis,_Belfast Type post Author George Gilder Date September 16, 2019 CategoriesArtsFaith & SciencePhilosophy Tagged , __edited, abortion, AIDS, Albert Einstein, Alexander Pope, C.S. Lewis, empirical science, faith, Harvard Divinity School, Homo sapiens, human brain, Max Delbrück, Michael Aeschliman, science, scientism, Stanley Jaki, Steven Weinberg, Ten Commandments, Thucydides Michael Aeschliman and the Consolation of Man George Gilder September 16, 2019 Arts, Faith & Science, Philosophy 8 Estranged from God, both art and science become incoherent babble, sliding toward an obsession with the prurient lure of triumphant evil. Read More ›