001WildGoldenEagleandMajinghornPfyn-FingesPhotobyGi Type post Author Giuseppe Sermonti Date November 30, 2025 CategoriesBiologyReproductive Science Tagged , asymmetry, autonomy, biology, cell division, chromosomes, cytoplasm, eagle, ectoplasm, eggs, embryo, fertilization, Hans Driesch, icons, induction, morphogenesis, physicists, spatial organization, thread From an Eagle’s Egg, an Eagle, and Other Mysteries Giuseppe Sermonti November 30, 2025 Biology, Reproductive Science 9 Pavel Florenskij, a Russian physicist and theologian (1882-1937), imagined a field on the surfaces of icons that portray sacred images. Read More ›
ShrewsburyLibrary-seatedstatueofCharlesDarwin251921 Type post Author Neil Thomas Date August 25, 2025 CategoriesHistory of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , agnosticism, Alfred Russel Wallace, Anselm, Anselm of Canterbury, atheism, Basil Willey, Brights, C. S. Lewis, causality, Charles Bradlaugh, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, Daniel Dennett, deism, Discovery Institute Press, Down House, ectoplasm, Edward Aveling, Enlightenment, Erasmus Darwin, False Messiah, Francis Bacon, Jacques Monod, Karl Marx, Lamarckism, Lawrence Krauss, Lisbon earthquake, Meister Eckhart, natural selection, New Atheists, Noam Chomsky, philosophy, phlogiston, Plato, problem of pain, Pyrrho, quantum physics, Sigmund Freud, skepticism, Steve Taylor, Thomas Aquinas, truth, Unmoved Mover, Virginia, Werner Heisenberg Enlightened No More: Darwin as Prefiguration of Postmodern Man Neil Thomas August 25, 2025 History of Science, Scientific Reasoning 17 Whether we like it or not, Erasmus Darwin’s simple and predictable world is no more, and we now find ourselves subject to a profoundly mysterious cosmos. Read More ›