JKRowling2010 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date September 26, 2025 CategoriesArtsBioethics Tagged , activism, assisted dying, assisted suicide, children, coercion, disability rights, England, equality, gender ideology, Harry Potter, liberals, physicians, popular culture, prevention, suicidal people, Wales, women J. K. Rowling Comes Out Against Legalized Assisted Suicide Wesley J. Smith September 26, 2025 Arts, Bioethics 2 Two of the core tenets of liberalism are (supposed to be) protecting vulnerable people from exploitation and promoting equality among all people. Read More ›
johannes-plenio-1vzLW-ihJaM-unsplash Type post Author Daniel Witt Date August 23, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , bacteria, biologists, Charles Darwin, diversification, emergence, Forensics, Gandalf, Harry Potter, intelligence, intelligent design, J.R.R. Tolkien, Mendelian genetics, Michael Behe, microscopes, Mount Doom, Neo-Darwinism, panpsychism, random variation, Return of the God Hypothesis, scientists, self-organization, Stephen Meyer, teleonomy, universe Will Evolution’s New Synthesis Be Hard or Soft Magic? Daniel Witt August 23, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 Let's try holding some new scientific theories to the standards of the fantasy genre. Read More ›
Stephen Meyer Type post Author Brian Miller Date October 16, 2021 CategoriesCosmologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , Alan Guth, Alexander Vilenkin, Arvind Borde, Bible, Big Bang, Christianity, cosmic fine-tuning, cosmic inflation, cosmic microwave background radiation, critics, Ethan Siegel, Harry Potter, intelligent design, Judaism, Return of the God Hypothesis, Singularity, Stephen Meyer, universe Critics Respond to Stephen Meyer’s New Book (Without Mentioning Him by Name) Brian Miller October 16, 2021 Cosmology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 5 The critics, including Ethan Siegel, appear to see Meyer much like Voldemort in the Harry Potter series. Read More ›
genetic-code-1 Type post Author Brian Miller Date December 15, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , __k-review, amino acids, codons, Dennis Venema, DNA, Eugene Koonin, genetic code, Harry Potter, hydrogen peroxide, intelligent design, Jack Szostak, Michael Yarus, Mount Rushmore, multiverse, nucleotides, proteins, Pythagorean Theorem, RNA, tRNA, V.J. Torley The Origin of Life: The Information Challenge Brian Miller December 15, 2017 Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 9 Today I will identify the fundamentally different approaches by ID advocates and critics toward assessing evidence. Read More ›