DarwinTomb Type post Date January 14, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEnvironment & ClimateEvolution Tagged , activists, billionaires, Charles Darwin, coal, environmentalism, evolution, extinction, gas, humans, Reuters, The Last Supper, Westminster Abbey In Unexpected Attack, Activists Deface Charles Darwin’s Tomb Science and Culture January 14, 2025 Bioethics, Environment & Climate, Evolution 3 Activists with Just Stop Oil seem to be attempting to enlist Darwin’s modern-day followers in their environment cause. Read More ›
fossil leaf Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date September 3, 2024 CategoriesGeologyIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesRare EarthTechnology Tagged , advanced life, atmosphere, biosphere, coal, copper, Donald Brownlee, earth, earthquakes, fossils, gold, iron, Jay Richards, magnetic field, Peter Ward, plate tectonics, salt, The Privileged Planet Plate Tectonics and Scientific Discovery Guillermo Gonzalez September 3, 2024 Geology, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Rare Earth, Technology 4 Plate tectonics is important for advanced life in multiple ways and planets with plate tectonics are very rare. Read More ›
Prometheus-Carrying-Fire Type post Author Michael Denton Date July 31, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignTechnology Tagged , charcoal, coal, fire, Fire-Maker series, fitness of nature, fuel, George Wald, inventiveness, metal, oxygen, photosynthesis, Prometheus, smelting, wood Needed for Fire: All the Right Fuel Michael Denton July 31, 2020 Intelligent Design, Technology 4 There is another aspect of the Earth’s environment that is absolutely crucial in allowing the utilization of fire for metal-based technologies. Read More ›
campfire Type post Author Michael Denton Date July 23, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, ambient temperatures, campfire, charcoal, coal, combustion, Fire-Maker series, genius, inventiveness, iron, matter, metallurgy, oxygen, smelting, Stone Age, stone tools, wood Combustion Is Anything but Ordinary Michael Denton July 23, 2020 Intelligent Design 5 The combustion of wood or coal may seem so familiar as to be unworthy of any comment. Read More ›
António Guterres Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 3, 2020 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , coal, coronavirus, COVID-19, fossil fuels, global warming, natural resources, New York Times, obesity, United Nations Time to Make Fossil Fuel Industries “Pay”? Wesley J. Smith May 3, 2020 Bioethics 3 Authoritarian central planning never works and it wouldn’t “save the planet.” It would just make us all less prosperous and free. Read More ›