Temptation_Adam_Eva Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 9, 2023 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , Adam and Eve, Ann Gauger, Answers in Genesis, BioLogos, Casey Luskin, Christianity, Denis Alexander, Evangelical Christians, evolutionary creationism, evolutionary models, Faraday Institute, Genealogical Adam and Eve, Homo heidelbergensis, human origins, Institute for Creation Research, integration, intelligent design, Ola Hössjer, Old Earth Creationism, peer-reviewed literature, Reasons to Believe, Religions (journal), S. Joshua Swamidass, Science and Faith in Dialogue, Science and Human Origins, Summer Seminar, theistic evolution, William Lane Craig, Young Earth Creationism, Zoom On Human Origins, New Peer-Reviewed Paper Reviews Models for Reconciling Science and Religion Casey Luskin June 9, 2023 Faith & Science, Human Origins and Anthropology 8 In the final section of the paper, I proposed a scoring system to rate the models. Read More ›
Adam and Eve Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 23, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , Adam and Eve, Ann Gauger, Annual Review of Genetics, apes, BioEssays, BioLogos, chimpanzees, Christianity, common ancestry, CRISPR, Dennis Venema, Evangelicals, evolution, evolutionary theory, functionality, Genealogical Adam and Eve, gorillas, hominids, human origins, In Quest of the Historical Adam, In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), intelligent design, Jesus Christ, junk DNA, Kenneth Miller, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, macaques, methodological naturalism, Nature (journal), Nature Reviews Genetics, Ola Hössjer, Paul Nelson, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, pseudogenes, Review of Craig's In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), RNA (journal), S. Joshua Swamidass, Science Signaling, Springer, Theist Evolution, theology, William Lane Craig Lessons Not Learned from the Evangelical Debate over Adam and Eve Casey Luskin November 23, 2021 Evolution, Faith & Science, Human Origins and Anthropology 37 To his credit, William Lane Craig is among those evangelicals who have been willing to question arguments against Adam and Eve. Read More ›