Darwin's shoes Type post Author Neil Thomas Date January 5, 2024 CategoriesEthicsEvolutionFaith & ScienceHistory of ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Adam and Eve, agency, Annie Besant, atheism, Charles Bradlaugh, Cicero, Connop Thirlwall, David Hanke, David Newsome, deduction, Enlightenment, evolution, fact, Garden of Eden, induction, intellectual history, intelligent design, James Henry Froude, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, John Gribbin, Julian Huxley, metaphysics, Nancy Pearcey, natural selection, Old Testament, On the Origin of Species, Paul Davies, progress, Richard Dawkins, Roman Catholic, teleology, theology, Thomas Huxley, Tom Wolfe, Uncertainty Principle, vera causa, Victorian England, watchmaker, Werner Heisenberg, William Blake Darwinism as Fact? The Waning of an Historical Myth Neil Thomas January 5, 2024 Ethics, Evolution, Faith & Science, History of Science, Intelligent Design 20 Historically the unfathomable subtleties of our terrestrial environment have been viewed as in and of themselves empirical markers for design. Read More ›
dart and target Type post Author Brian Miller Date August 25, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biologists, David Hanke, evolution, Georges Cuvier, intelligent design, materialism, MIT Press, paleontologists, somatic cells, System Modeling in Cellular Biology, Systems Biology, teleology The Return of Teleology to Biology Brian Miller August 25, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Biologists have faced a vexing dilemma since the philosophy of scientific materialism came to dominate Western thought. Read More ›