Covid Type post Author Ann Gauger Date November 18, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionMedicine Tagged , Alfred Wegener, Anthony Fauci, arXiv, CDC, Continental Drift, firefighters, geologists, government, Ignaz Semmelweis, mental health, microbes, mimesis, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, nurses, Pangaea, philosophers, police, propaganda, René Girard, Vaccines Mimetic Behavior in the Scientific Community Ann Gauger November 18, 2023 Evolution, Medicine 5 Sometimes the suppression comes from the government. The restriction on doctors' freedom to use promising treatments during the pandemic was unprecedented. Read More ›
Earth Mars Comparison Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date May 23, 2019 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateGeophysicsOrigin of LifePlanetologyRare Earth Tagged , __nedited, Alfred Wegener, Aristotle, biodiversity, Continental Drift, Copernicus, Darwinists, desert, Donald Brownlee, earth, exoplanets, heliocentrism, James Kasting, lithosphere, magnetic field, Mars, Milky Way, Peter Ward, plate tectonics, subduction, sun, Venus, volcanism Plate Tectonics: Why Life Is Served on Plates Guillermo Gonzalez May 23, 2019 Environment & Climate, Geophysics, Origin of Life, Planetology, Rare Earth 6 The ground under your feet is literally moving. The continents are drifting apart near an average rate of one inch per year. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date October 18, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Wegener, Continental Drift, Douglas Axe, Günter Bechly, ID the Future, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, Laurence Moran, mechanism, Michael Denton, Michael Keas, plate tectonics, Robert Crowther, Stephen Meyer, theory, University of Toronto, William A. Dembski How to Think About Minority Science Views — The Case of Plate Tectonics David Klinghoffer October 18, 2017 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 5 The idea that continents drift is now taken for granted, but it wasn’t always. Read More ›
Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 14, 2012 CategoriesGeologyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Wegener, Continental Drift, Smithsonian For Intelligent-Design Advocates, Lessons from the Debate over Continental Drift Casey Luskin June 14, 2012 Geology, Intelligent Design 5 A classic example of how the scientific community can radically change its mind, after decades of ridiculing an idea. Read More ›