Phoenix-Fabelwesen Type post Author Neil Thomas Date January 26, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhilosophy Tagged , Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Charles Darwin and the Ghost of Epicurus (series), Cicero, David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Enlightenment, Erasmus Darwin, evolution, Galen, intelligent design, Lucretius, Phoenix, Plato, pre-Socratic philosophers, Stoics, Thomas Aquinas The Enlightenment (Re)turn to Atomism Neil Thomas January 26, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Philosophy 8 What distinguished thinkers had long called out for its manifest absurdity was now, Phoenix-like, rising from the ashes. Read More ›
eye Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date January 19, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Charles Darwin, Cicero, evolution, eye, intelligent design, John Ray, natural theology, retina, signal transduction, vision, voltage The Eye: A Classic Example of Natural Design Cornelius Hunter January 19, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Even Charles Darwin, after publishing his theory of evolution, privately admitted “The eye to this day gives me a cold shudder.” Read More ›
sun Type post Author Neil Thomas Date December 9, 2021 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Anthony Flew, Aristotle, atheism, British Rationalist Association, Cicero, Cristian Bandea, DNA, electron microscope, Epicurus, Eric Metaxas, First Cause, Galen, intellectual history, Irreducible Complexity, Is Atheism Dead?, Lucretius, Paul Davies, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Plato, Return of the God Hypothesis, Stephen Meyer, The Return to the God Paradigm (series) Nothing New Under the Sun Neil Thomas December 9, 2021 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 7 The inference to a First Cause has begun to percolate down to people who hold no prior allegiance to any of the world’s accredited religions. Read More ›
Taking Leave of Darwin Type post Author Neil Thomas Date November 15, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Cicero, common sense, David Hume, Epicurus, evolution, Galen, Geoffrey Chaucer, How I Came to Take Leave of Darwin (series), Lucretius, materialism, natural selection, Plato, Victorian England How I Came to Take Leave of Darwin: A Coda Neil Thomas November 15, 2021 Evolution, Faith & Science 2 After seeing my recent book through to publication, I began to experience a certain gnawing feeling. Read More ›
Thomas Reid Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 29, 2020 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignPhilosophyPhilosophy of Science Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, Cicero, common sense, cosmological argument, David Hume, Evolution News, history, ID the Future, intelligent design, James Barham, Jay Richards, metaethics, Michael Denton, natural theology, Plato, podcast, realism, Scotland, teleology, The Miracle of the Cell, University of Glasgow Thomas Reid — Recovering Another ID Ancestor David Klinghoffer September 29, 2020 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science 2 “There’s little doubt in my mind that Reid if he were alive today would be part of the intelligent design movement.” Read More ›
girl riding a horse 2 Type post Author Ann Gauger Date June 6, 2018 CategoriesArtsIntelligent DesignMathematics Tagged , __k-review, beauty, Cicero, David Hume, evolution, horse, Johann Sebastian Bach, music, natural selection, neuroscience, New York Times, Paul Davies, Pleistocene, sea urchins, sexual dimorphism, symmetry Beauty Leads Us Home Ann Gauger June 6, 2018 Arts, Intelligent Design, Mathematics 11 Why is the world a beautiful place and why does it touch me? Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date September 5, 2016 CategoriesHistory of SciencePhilosophy of Science Tagged , __tedited, Alfred North Whitehead, Cicero, complex specified information, Duke of Argyll, Etienne Gilson, form, limits of science, mind, natural theology, substance, Universal Design Intuition Intelligent Design, from Cicero to Kant Sarah Chaffee September 5, 2016 History of Science, Philosophy of Science 7 Darwin himself sought to overcome his own design intuition. Read More ›