Meyer book background image Type post Author Elizabeth Whately Date August 2, 2021 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifePhilosophy Tagged , abduction, Bayesian reasoning, computer code, David Berlinski, David Glass, deductive proof, God Hypothesis, inference to the best explanation, intelligent agency, intelligent design, James Croft, likelihood ratio, philosophers, probability, probability bound, Return of the God Hypothesis, St. Louis, Stephen Meyer, Substack, syllogism, Unbelievable, universal probability bound, William A. Dembski Stephen Meyer, James Croft: Philosophers Battle Over the God Hypothesis Elizabeth Whately August 2, 2021 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Philosophy 7 Croft ultimately had the worse of the argument on substance, as I intend to show over several forthcoming posts. Read More ›
Aquinas Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 12, 2021 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , atheism, Charles Darwin, COVID-19, deductive proof, dinosaurs, gravitational field, inductive reasoning, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Jerry Coyne, Jesus Christ, Manhattan, natural science, New York State, Thomas Aquinas, unicorns, wolves Why an Argument for God’s Existence Is Scientific Michael Egnor April 12, 2021 Faith & Science 4 Atheist evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne is a fountain of nonsensical arguments against the existence of God. Read More ›