William Erasmus Darwin Type post Author Eric Hedin Date January 8, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Abraham Lincoln, Alfred Tennyson, Benjamin Wiker, birth, Canceled Science, Charles Darwin, children, Christmas Eve, evolution, faith, future, Gettysburg Address, history, intelligent design, Kentucky, materialism, Napoleon, newborn, pregnancy, Prime Minister, providence, United States Design in the Grand Human Story Eric Hedin January 8, 2024 Biochemistry, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 5 Two famous individuals who share the birthdate of February 12, 1809, are Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln. Read More ›
Algernon Charles Swinburne Type post Author Neil Thomas Date March 4, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Alfred Tennyson, Algernon Charles Swinburne, asceticism, Charles Darwin, Christianity, Darwin and the Victorian Crisis of Faith (series), Dover Beach, Epicurus, Greek gods, In Memoriam, Matthew Arnold, Mrs. Humphry Ward, On the Origin of Species, Oxford, Robert Elsmere, theomachy, Victorian England Darwin and Theomachy Neil Thomas March 4, 2022 Evolution, Faith & Science 4 Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) provides the closest chronological fit with Darwin. Read More ›
Charles-darwin-portrait-sitting-on-chair-sketch 2 Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date July 7, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionScience Education Tagged , Alfred Tennyson, Benedikt Hallgrimsson, Brian K. Hall, élan vital, evolution, evolutionary biology, Galileo Galilei, Genetics (journal), George Bernard Shaw, George Eliot, Harvard School of Public Health, heliocentric model, Henri Bergson, Herbert Spencer, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, John Cairns, Joseph Conrad, Karl Marx, Max Delbrück, Nicolaus Copernicus, Peter Bowler, Ptolemaic system, randomness, religion, Salvador Luria, Sigmund Freud, Strickberger’s Evolution, textbooks, Thomas Hardy, Thomas Kuhn The Triumphalism of Strickberger’s Evolution Robert Shedinger July 7, 2020 Evolution, Science Education 7 The oversimplification here is staggering (Darwin and women’s rights?!) and would take an entire book to unpack. Read More ›