pia22081orig Type post Author Larry Sanger Date February 11, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhilosophyTechnology Tagged , "God of the gaps", Albert Einstein, argument from ignorance, benevolence, Big Bang, Christianity, complexity, constants, David Hume, designer, faith, intelligent design, logos, matter, natural laws, philosophers, Stephen Meyer, universe, William Lane Craig Re-Examining the Arguments for the Existence of God Larry Sanger February 11, 2025 Faith & Science, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Philosophy, Technology 8 I was impressed by a lecture by philosopher of science and well-known apologist Stephen Meyer. Read More ›
Hamas Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 19, 2023 CategoriesArtsBioethicsEvolutionPhilosophy Tagged , Albert Einstein, atheism, benevolence, Charles Darwin, creation myth, Darwinism, determinism, eugenics, evil, Gaza, genes, genocide, good, Hamas, Holocaust, human nature, humanity, innocents, Israel, Moral Law, morality, music, natural selection, neurotransmitters, Raoul Wallenberg, rape, relativism, selfish genes, slaughter, sterilization, William Shakespeare From Hamas, a Moment of Clarity about Darwinism and More Michael Egnor October 19, 2023 Arts, Bioethics, Evolution, Philosophy 7 The real test of a worldview is not merely what it explains, but what it makes us deny. Atheism makes us deny objective moral law. Read More ›
Steven Weinberg Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 26, 2022 CategoriesCosmologyFaith & SciencePhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , atheism, benevolence, Brian Keating, evidence, faith, God Hypothesis, intelligent design, Into the Impossible, Nobel laureates, podcast, Stephen Meyer, Steven Weinberg, The First Three Minutes, UC San Diego When Physicists Clash: Brian Keating on the Atheism of Steven Weinberg David Klinghoffer January 26, 2022 Cosmology, Faith & Science, Physical Sciences, Physics 3 “Almost a designer”? Interesting choice of words. It’s remarkable to hear such a frank discussion. Read More ›
Hippocrates Type post Author Michael Egnor Date July 18, 2017 CategoriesEthicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, benevolence, euthanasia, handicapped, homicide, Jerry Coyne, killing, medicine, palliative care, physicians, suffering The Second Most Horrendous Thing About Euthanasia Michael Egnor July 18, 2017 Ethics, Medicine 4 Don’t involve the medical profession in your atrocity. It takes no skill to kill a baby. Read More ›