Gilson Lents Type post Author Tom Gilson Date October 29, 2020 CategoriesLife SciencesScientific Reasoning Tagged , angiosperms, beauty, California, Christianity, Discovery Institute, Europe, evolutionists, false dichotomy, flowering plants, forests, Homo sapiens, homogeneity, humans, intelligent design, logical fallacies, mountains, Nathan Lents, North America, Orange County, physiology, sarcasm, Sudoku, theism, Tom Gilson, Twitter On Fall Foliage, Nathan Lents Comes Up Short Tom Gilson October 29, 2020 Life Sciences, Scientific Reasoning 10 There is nothing in the word “gift” that entails its having been given identically to all persons at all times. That’s not hard, actually. Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date November 19, 2017 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, assisted suicide, correlation, death certificate, false dichotomy, homicide, physician, statistics, suicide, Switzerland, Washington State Assisted Suicide Should Be Included in Suicide Statistics Wesley J. Smith November 19, 2017 Bioethics, Medicine 2 Here are illustrations from Washington State, and from Switzerland. Read More ›
Type post Author Michael Behe Date May 12, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsScience Reporting Tagged , __tedited, adaptive mutations, Barry Hall, citrate, contingency, dishonesty, E. coli, Elizabeth Pennisi, epigenetic change, exaggeration, false dichotomy, genetic changes, hype, laboratory conditions, limits of evolution, loss-of-function mutations, LTEE, media, motivated reasoning, peer review, public opinion, repeatability, Richard Lenski, science journalism, Science News, science reporting, Scott Minnich, speciation Richard Lenski and Citrate Hype — Now Deflated Michael Behe May 12, 2016 Evolution, Genetics, Science Reporting 8 For more than 25 years, Lenski's lab has grown a dozen lines of the bacterium E. coli in small culture flasks. Read More ›