pigeon Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date March 17, 2021 CategoriesArtsBioethicsBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , Abraham Lincoln, Blaise Pascal, Charles Darwin, Christendom, Claudius, creator, Crime and Punishment, Darwinian theory, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Gothic cathedrals, H.G. Wells, Hamlet, intelligent design, John Updike, literature, logical positivism, Marxism, materialism, Middle Ages, narrative, nihilism, pigeons, Pulitzer Prize, sublime, The Time Machine, William Shakespeare Intelligent Design and the Restoration of Story Jonathan Witt March 17, 2021 Arts, Bioethics, Biology, Intelligent Design 11 Celebrating the growing evidence of intelligent design can help rescue the arts from the nihilism and ugliness they have descended into in many quarters. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 11, 2018 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __k-review, Albert Einstein, amygdala, Aristotle, brain, Claudius, Hamlet, library, Michael Egnor, mind, Mind Matters, neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neuroscience, parable, physiology, William Shakespeare Egnor — Introducing the Aristotelian Neuroscientist David Klinghoffer November 11, 2018 Neuroscience & Mind 2 Considering Hamlet, the Aristotelian can appreciate both the physiology and the drama to which the mechanist is blind. Read More ›