Arecibo Type post Date July 12, 2022 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , agnosticism, atheism, Carl Sagan, Contact (novel), Design Inference, DNA, extra-terrestrial intelligence, Gifford lectures, ID the Future, intelligent design, Paul Nelson, podcast, radio signals, science fiction, theism Carl Sagan’s Love/Hate Relationship with Intelligent Design Science and Culture July 12, 2022 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 2 Philosopher of science Paul Nelson explores an intriguing tension in the thinking of the famous scientist and science popularizer. Read More ›
Young C. S. Lewis Type post Author John G. West Date November 1, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Origins and AnthropologyScientific Reasoning Tagged , agnosticism, Alfred Russel Wallace, animals, Arthur Balfour, C.S. Lewis, evolution, G.K. Chesterton, Gifford lectures, intelligent design, morality, natural selection, Plato, relativism, St. George Jackson Mivart, The Autobiography of Charles Darwin Humanity: Natural Selection’s Ultimate Challenge According to C. S. Lewis John G. West November 1, 2021 Bioethics, Human Origins and Anthropology, Scientific Reasoning 11 How could a blind material process produce man’s unique capabilities of reason and conscience? Read More ›
C. S. Lewis Type post Author Jay W. Richards Date October 26, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & SciencePhilosophyScientific Reasoning Tagged , Alvin Plantinga, Arthur Balfour, C.S. Lewis, Christopher Columbus, evolution, Gifford lectures, J.B.S. Haldane, knowledge, Miracles (book), natural selection, naturalism, Oxford University, Plato, The Most Reluctant Convert, Victor Reppert C. S. Lewis and the Argument from Reason Jay W. Richards October 26, 2021 Bioethics, Faith & Science, Philosophy, Scientific Reasoning 11 Naturalists, like everyone else, generally trust their reason to lead them to truth. Read More ›
Freeman_dyson Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date March 2, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMathematicsPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , __edited, A Fortunate Universe, Big Science, Cambridge University, Christianity, climate change, Frank Tipler, Freeman Dyson, Gifford lectures, Institute for Advanced Study, intelligent design, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Jacques Monod, Nobel Prize, pantheism, physicists, Politics, quantum mechanics, religion, Scotland, string theory, Templeton Prize, theology, universe, war, World War II Freeman Dyson: The Passing of an Iconoclastic Physicist Guillermo Gonzalez March 2, 2020 Intelligent Design, Mathematics, Physical Sciences, Physics 6 Dyson was careful to take an open-minded approach: not fully endorsing design, yet not rejecting it either. Read More ›