abacus-on-white-background-stockpack-adobe-stock-240043381-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author William A. Dembski Date April 8, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEthicsMathematicsScience Education Tagged , 1984 (novel), Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, Alvin Plantinga, Aristotle, baseball, brainwashing, Brooklyn College, cancel culture, China, colors, constructivism, deconstruction, doors, Euclid, freedom, Friedrich Nietzsche, gender, George Orwell, John Archibald Wheeler, Joseph Stalin, knowledge, Live Not By Lies, Michel Foucault, Ontario, philosophers, Pythagoras, Queer Theory, queering, relativism, Richard Rorty, sex, teachers, transgenderism, truth, Twitter, University of Chicago, University of Haifa The War on 2 + 2 = 4 William A. Dembski April 8, 2024 Biology, Ethics, Mathematics, Science Education 23 The people weighing in against 2 + 2 = 4 are not mathematicians but in education departments where they teach the teaching of mathematics. Read More ›
close-up-of-male-hands-skillfully-playing-the-piano-showcasi-839642887-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date November 23, 2022 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyChemistryEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhysicsReproductive Science Tagged , architecture, blood, color, colors, darkness, death, ears, equilibrium, evolution, excerpt, eyes, heart, human body, information, intelligent design, life, light, lungs, medicine, oxygen, photons, physicians, piano, Richard Dawkins, running, Steve Laufmann, swimming, systems, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Thomas Kuhn, Walt Whitman “Poor Design”? Actually, the Human Body Is Amazing; Here’s Why Howard Glicksman and Steve Laufmann November 23, 2022 Anatomy, Biology, Chemistry, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Physics, Reproductive Science 13 If someone suggests that a coherent, interdependent system of systems arose by chance, they’ll need to back that up with a detailed engineering analysis. Read More ›
Gilson 1 Type post Author Tom Gilson Date October 27, 2020 CategoriesFaith & ScienceLife SciencesReproductive Science Tagged , adaptation, babies, beauty, chlorophyll, colors, evolution, experience, leaves, subjectivity, winter The Glorious, Intentional Gift of Autumn Beauty Tom Gilson October 27, 2020 Faith & Science, Life Sciences, Reproductive Science 3 Is there something adaptive to the enjoyment of colors in such a wild mix; and in our enjoying it at one particular time of the year? Read More ›