Lucretius Type post Author Neil Thomas Date November 11, 2021 CategoriesCosmologyIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , Copernican Revolution, cosmic rays, earth, evolution, gravitational field, heliocentric model, How I Came to Take Leave of Darwin (series), humankind, intelligent design, Lucretius, Michael Denton The Stars Above Us Neil Thomas November 11, 2021 Cosmology, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 3 What Lucretius once termed in the widest sense “the nature of things” is no respecter of modern scientific conventions. Read More ›
Aquinas Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 12, 2021 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , atheism, Charles Darwin, COVID-19, deductive proof, dinosaurs, gravitational field, inductive reasoning, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Jerry Coyne, Jesus Christ, Manhattan, natural science, New York State, Thomas Aquinas, unicorns, wolves Why an Argument for God’s Existence Is Scientific Michael Egnor April 12, 2021 Faith & Science 4 Atheist evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne is a fountain of nonsensical arguments against the existence of God. Read More ›
Earth 1970 Type post Author Michael Denton Date July 28, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , atmosphere, carbon dioxide, combustion, fire, Fire-Maker series, Goldilocks, gravitational field, gravity, helium, hydrogen, intelligent design, nitrogen, oxygen, planetary design, respiration For Fire, Our Planet Is Just the Right Size Michael Denton July 28, 2020 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 3 Self-evidently, the gravity on the surface of a planet limits the maximum size of large terrestrial organisms. Read More ›