car break-in Type post Author Elizabeth Whately Date August 13, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy Tagged , aliens, background knowledge, car break-in, debate, Fran Lebowitz, inference to the best explanation, James Croft, motives, philosophers, reductio ad absurdum, Return of the God Hypothesis, skeptics, Stephen Meyer, Substack, William A. Dembski Croft, Continued: More Thoughts on Meyer’s Debate with a Skeptic Elizabeth Whately August 13, 2021 Intelligent Design, Philosophy 6 I think he’s mistaken my emphasis in the specific car break-in examples I gave, namely that the burglars’ behavior was odd and unpredictable. Read More ›
baby and puppy Type post Author Elizabeth Whately Date August 6, 2021 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Bayesian reasoning, car break-in, Charles Lyell, Charles Sanders Peirce, Croatia, Fran Lebowitz, God Hypothesis, inference to the best explanation, intelligent design, James Croft, Lydia McGrew, masks, Michael Scriven, philosophers, puppy, Return of the God Hypothesis, Stephen Meyer, Substack God Hypothesis: The Problem of Background Knowledge Elizabeth Whately August 6, 2021 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 8 The wet-washcloth sensation of puppy tongue on baby cheeks is part of the baby’s evidence that Puppy exists. Read More ›