Dead Sea Scrolls Type post Author Eric Hedin Date November 21, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Antarctica, arson, carbon dioxide, Dead Sea Scrolls, design detection, intelligence, intelligent agency, magnetic field, Michael Egnor, minds, natural forces, Paul Nelson, probability, water, William A. Dembski Design: A Scientific Proxy for Intelligence Eric Hedin November 21, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 The Dead Sea Scrolls are an example of a design artifact for which intelligence is inferred as the source. Read More ›
Dembski Type post Author Paul Nelson Date June 16, 2021 CategoriesArchaeologyBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , arson, crime, cryptanalysis, cryptography, inference, insurance, intellectual property, intelligent design, logic, medicine, paleoanthropology, William A. Dembski What Got My Attention about Intelligent Design Paul Nelson June 16, 2021 Archaeology, Biology, Intelligent Design 1 Bill Dembski pointed out that design detection, far from being an esoteric inference, lay in fact at the center of many normal human inquiries and activities. Read More ›
Exécution_de_Marie_Antoinette_le_16_octobre_1793 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 2, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , “consensus science”, academic freedom, American Revolution, arson, conservatives, Darwinism, David Coppedge, Douglas Axe, free speech, French Revolution, Günter Bechly, intelligent design, John Adams, looting, Marxism, Oregon, Portland, Richard Sternberg, rioting, Scott Minnich, Stephen Meyer, The New Criterion, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Thomas Jefferson, Tony Woodlief, Wall Street Journal, Wesley Smith, William F. Buckley Jr., Willmoore Kendall, Yale University Why Intelligent Design Had to Be the First to Face the Guillotine David Klinghoffer September 2, 2020 Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 7 In Wesley J. Smith’s phrase, in the present cultural moment, we have witnessed “the French Revolution attacking the American Revolution.” Read More ›