focus Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 24, 2023 CategoriesBiologyChemistryEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , Alexander Vilenkin, atheism, Avi Loeb, character assassination, Charles Lineweaver, Christoph Adami, Darwin-skeptics, Dave Farina, David Berlinski, Denis Noble, Discovery Institute, enzymes, evolution, genetic fallacy, Ian Tattersall, Inference (journal), James Shapiro, James Tour, Jean-Pierre Luminet, Jeremy England, Lawrence Krauss, Lee Cronin, Martin Rees, Noam Chomsky, polymers, polynucleotides, polypeptides, Professor Dave, Professor Dave Explains, proteins, Richard Dawkins, RNA, specified information, The Workhorse of the Cell James Tour Focused on Science, Dave Farina on Character Assassination: So, Who Wins? Casey Luskin May 24, 2023 Biology, Chemistry, Evolution, Life Sciences 9 Professor Dave’s attacks undercut his credibility as a spokesman for his own view. If he had the truth on his side, there’s no reason he would behave this way. Read More ›
pious ape 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 23, 2019 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , __k-review, adaptation, Africa, apes, atheism, BBC, birth control, bonobos, chimpanzees, Christians, church, communion, Darwinism, Easter, Eucharist, evolution, genetic fallacy, 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 ›
Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 23, 2016 CategoriesFaith & SciencePhilosophyScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, accountability, atheism, begging the question, causality, circular causality, cosmic beginning, deism, empiricism, genetic fallacy, God Hypothesis, ground of existence, intelligent agency, motivated reasoning, natural evil, rationality, scientific debate, self-refutation, teleology, theism The Rowe-Grayling Debate Michael Egnor June 23, 2016 Faith & Science, Philosophy, Scientific Reasoning 7 Grayling's problem is not merely his frank incompetence in open debate (you can understand his penchant for censorship). Read More ›