Ewert-cover Type post Author William A. Dembski Date October 27, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHistory of Science Tagged , artificial intelligence, Baylor University, bioethics, biology, Christians, Christopher Columbus, complementarian model, computer science, concordance models?, conflict model, Copernicus, cosmology, evolution, flat-earth cosmology, Galileo Galilei, Genesis, genomes, Google, Grove City College, history, history of science, intelligent design, Mount Doom, natural philosophy, poetry, pre-Copernican science, religion, Robert J. Marks II, skeptics, St. Thomas Aquinas, The Heavens the Waters and the Partridge, Winston Ewert Science Before the Rise of Modern Science William A. Dembski October 27, 2025 Faith & Science, History of Science 25 An interview with Winston Ewert about his fascinating new book on the interaction between science and faith before Copernicus. Read More ›
Rio Carrao, Venezuela Type post Author Granville Sewell Date November 21, 2022 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , Christopher Columbus, failure, floods, Guadalupe Mountains National Park, human body, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, laws of nature, Michelangelo, mountains, nature, Panama Canal, risk, tragedy, William Shakespeare, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Intelligent Design and the Regularity of Natural Law Granville Sewell November 21, 2022 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Physics 8 The laws of nature work together to create a magnificent world of mountains and rivers, jungles and waterfalls, oceans and forests, animals and plants. Read More ›
C. S. Lewis Type post Author Jay W. Richards Date October 26, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & SciencePhilosophyScientific Reasoning Tagged , Alvin Plantinga, Arthur Balfour, C.S. Lewis, Christian Reflections, Christopher Columbus, evolution, Gifford lectures, J.B.S. Haldane, knowledge, Miracles (book), natural selection, naturalism, Oxford University, Plato, The Most Reluctant Convert, Theism and Humanism, Victor Reppert C. S. Lewis and the Argument from Reason Jay W. Richards October 26, 2021 Bioethics, Faith & Science, Philosophy, Scientific Reasoning 11 Naturalists, like everyone else, generally trust their reason to lead them to truth. Read More ›
Margaret Sanger Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 25, 2020 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , Ben Carson, Boston, Charles Darwin, Christopher Columbus, civil rights, Darwin Day in America, Discovery Institute, eugenics, J. Budziszewski, John West, Ku Klux Klan, Margaret Sanger, Margaret Sanger Square, memory, museums, New York City, Planned Parenthood, Racism, Robert E. Lee, Smithsonian Institution, statues, United States, V.I. Lenin, vandalism, Washington DC, Woodrow Wilson Margaret Sanger Statues Honor a Racist and Eugenicist; but as with Darwin, Let Her Stay David Klinghoffer June 25, 2020 Bioethics 6 Historical statues are a dispersed temple to memory, in need of vigilant guarding. Read More ›
Michael Denton Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 25, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, censorship, Christopher Columbus, Confederacy, evolution, Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis, history, Michael Denton, Natural History Museum, Richard Owen, Robert E. Lee, statues, structuralism, V.I. Lenin Darwinists Are Practiced in Shuffling Statues David Klinghoffer August 25, 2017 Evolution, Scientific Freedom 3 What they did to Richard Owen could teach today’s vandals a thing or two. Read More ›
eclipse-1925 Type post Date August 16, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, "God of the gaps", China, Christopher Columbus, chronology, Greece, history, Ireland, lunar eclipse, Mark Twain, NASA, Old Testament, solar eclipse The Impact of Solar Eclipses for History Science and Culture August 16, 2017 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 6 When the sky goes dark at mid-day, people notice. Read More ›