rainbow Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date October 25, 2021 CategoriesAstronomyIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , atmosphere, beauty, chemical elements, Doppler effect, helium, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Jay W. Richards, Mars, Mercury, Moon, rainbows, René Descartes, solar eclipse, stars, sun, telescope, The Comprehensive Guide to Science and Faith, The Privileged Planet, Titan, universe, Venus, water Do We Live on a Privileged Planet? Guillermo Gonzalez October 25, 2021 Astronomy, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 7 Yes, rainbows are beautiful, but are they good for anything? Indeed, they have been very important for science. Read More ›
Milky-Way-1 Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date October 17, 2019 CategoriesCosmologyPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , __edited, Albert Einstein, astronomers, Big Bang, cepheid variable stars, CMBR, cosmological constant, cosmologists, dark energy, dark matter, Doppler effect, Gaia spacecraft, general relativity, Hubble Space Telescope, Nobel Prize, universe A Crisis in Cosmology? Guillermo Gonzalez October 17, 2019 Cosmology, Physical Sciences, Physics 6 It’s too bad biologists are not as open about crises in their theories. It’s the sign of a healthy science. Read More ›
Lemaitre Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 7, 2017 CategoriesAstronomyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Big Bang, Darwin's Doubt, Darwinian evolution, Discovering Intelligent Design, Doppler effect, Edwin Hubble, First Cause, Georges Lemaître, ID's Top Six, intelligent design, Islam, Kalam cosmological argument, NASA, redshift, Signature in the Cell, Stephen Meyer, universe, William Lane Craig ID’s Top Six — The Origin of the Universe Casey Luskin November 7, 2017 Astronomy, Intelligent Design 5 In 1927, Belgian astronomer Georges Lemaître theorized that the universe began with a single explosion from a densely compacted state. Read More ›
Egyptian_fruit_bat_baby Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date April 20, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesScience Tagged , __k-review, bats, convergent evolution, Darwin, Dennis Venema, Doppler effect, echolocation, evolution, Warfare Thesis, whales Echolocation…Solved? Cornelius Hunter April 20, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences, Science 15 Surely no objective scientist would find evidence for evolution in nature’s echolocation designs. Would they? Read More ›