quantum mechanics Type post Author Peter Biles Date July 15, 2023 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPhysical Sciences Tagged , David Berlinski, Eucharist, microscopes, observation, paradigm shift, philosophers, quantum mechanics, reality, Science After Babel, telescopes Can the Quantum Realm Explain Reality? Peter Biles July 15, 2023 Neuroscience & Mind, Physical Sciences 3 If we can uncover the smallest quantum particles in nature, will we have uncovered the fundamental secrets of reality? Read More ›
Bruegel’s Tower of Babel Type post Author David Berlinski Date June 5, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionPhysical Sciences Tagged , atheism, biologists, Blaise Pascal, calculus, David Chalmers, Eucharist, materialism, naturalism, numbers, particles, physicalism, physicists, René Thom, Science After Babel, scientific revolution, scientism, theologians, Tower of Babel, transhumanism Science After Babel: An Exercise in Self-Criticism David Berlinski June 5, 2023 Evolution, Physical Sciences 6 Until the day before yesterday, the imperial architects of the scientific revolution were well satisfied and sleek as seals. Read More ›
William Wordsworth Type post Author Neil Thomas Date November 7, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & Science Tagged , China, Christianity, Eucharist, Europe, history, India, Jesus Christ, John Keats, John Milton, Middle Ages, Middle East, nature, Paradise Lost, poets, Roman Catholic, Thomas Aquinas, William Wordsworth, Wordsworth versus Darwin (series) The Apotheosis of William Wordsworth Neil Thomas November 7, 2022 Bioethics, Faith & Science 3 What many responded to in Wordsworth’s evocations of Nature’s sacrality was his restoration of a partially obscured link between Nature and the divine. Read More ›
pious ape 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 23, 2019 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , __k-review, adaptation, Africa, apes, atheism, BBC, bonobos, chimpanzees, Christians, church, Darwinism, Easter, Eucharist, evolution, great apes, humans, Jane Goodall, jesus, last common ancestor, Mass, materialists, meals, monkeys, neocortex, On the Origin of Species, religion, savannah How Did Religion “Evolve”? Michael Egnor April 23, 2019 Neuroscience & Mind, Psychology 6 It’s telling that one kind of evolution always seems to be missing from these “theories” about the evolutionary origins of religion. Read More ›