Nobel Prize Type post Author Angus Menuge Date October 2, 2023 CategoriesFaith & ScienceNeuroscience & MindScientific Reasoning Tagged , Charles Taliaferro, Discovery Institute Press, dualism, epiphenomenon, experience, Higgs Boson, mental states, mind, Minding the Brain, Nobel Prize, observation, Peter Higgs, Richard Swinburne, thoughts Physicalism Versus the Practice of Science Angus Menuge October 2, 2023 Faith & Science, Neuroscience & Mind, Scientific Reasoning 3 The idea that science has somehow shown the irrelevance of the mind to explaining behavior is seriously confused. Read More ›
Charles Darwin, caricatured in Vanity Fair. Date: 1871 Type post Author Neil Thomas Date February 1, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionGeologyIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , Anthropic Principle, argument from analogy, Barry Gale, biblical flood, Brandon Carter, Carl Sagan, category error, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, Copernican principle, coral reefs, epiphenomenon, evolution, Frank Drake, gemmules, Georges Cuvier, Glen Roy, Goldilocks Zone, HMS Beagle, James Hutton, Louis Agassiz, Mendelian genetics, Natural Theology (book), On the Origin of Species, Principles of Geology, Robert Shedinger, Royal Society, Scotland, South America, Theory of the Earth, uniformitarianism, William Paley Darwin’s Category Errors and Their Consequences Neil Thomas February 1, 2023 Evolution, Geology, Intelligent Design, Science 15 Charles Darwin indiscriminately lumped together the organic and inorganic spheres — a grand category error. Read More ›