Type post Author William A. Dembski Date July 6, 2016 CategoriesPaleontologyScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, biogeography, cherry-picking fallacy, common ancestry, convergence, design motifs, empirical evidence, evolutionary time, file drawer problem, fossil record, Foundation for Thought and Ethics, genetics, geological time, incomplete lineage sorting, lineages, promotions, structural motif, suppressed evidence, timeline, transitional links Why Fossils Cannot Demonstrate Darwinian Evolution William A. Dembski July 6, 2016 Paleontology, Scientific Reasoning 10 There are three fundamental problems with all examples of inferring Darwinian evolution on the basis of fossil evidence. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date April 27, 2016 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, Alvin Plantinga, animals, biases, C. S. Lewis, cherry-picking fallacy, circular reasoning, education, human capacities, human condition, human nature, inference, John West, lawyers, methodology, Nancy Pearcey, naturalism, nonsense, objectivity, people, psychology, reasoning, scientific advance, scientific method, technological advancement, trust in scientists Lawyer, Scientist, or Animal? Choosing Between Evolution and Human Reason Sarah Chaffee April 27, 2016 Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 4 Darwinism undercuts human reason. That's bad news for science. Read More ›