William_Whewell_portrait Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date December 7, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of Science Tagged , causal agents, Charles Darwin, Christianity, ID the Future, intelligent design, methodological naturalism, methodological pluralism, Michael Keas, podcast, scientific inquiry, William Whewell William Whewell: Statesman of Science Andrew McDiarmid December 7, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science 2 Are there natural limits to biological change? Is the evidence for design in nature well founded? Read More ›
astronomical clock Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date December 6, 2023 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , causal agents, Christianity, Greco-Roman world, history, humanity, ID the Future, intelligent agents, knowledge, Medieval Europe, methodological naturalism, methodological pluralism, Michael Keas, natural causes, nature, podcast, scientism, scientists, unintelligent causes, universe When Natural and Super-Natural Explanations Work Hand in Hand Andrew McDiarmid December 6, 2023 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 2 Methodological naturalism is the idea that scientists may only invoke unintelligent causes for nature’s history. Read More ›
Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date May 31, 2016 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, causal agents, causality, causation, defining terms, demarcation criteria, falsifiability, historical sciences, inference to the best explanation, methodological materialism, methodology, motivated reasoning, objectivity, observability, predictive-success, presuppositions, pseudoscience, scientific method, scientific reasoning, testability, worldview Foundational Question: Is Intelligent Design Science? Steve Laufmann May 31, 2016 Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 7 It's long been said that the path to the right answers lies in asking the right questions. Read More ›