StGeorgeJacksonMivart Type post Author James Barham Date September 30, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Charles Darwin, Church of England, Darwin’s bulldog, Darwinism, Ernst Haeckel, evolution, evolutionism, excommunication, faith and science, General Morphology of Organisms, Generelle Morphologie der Organismen, historical figures, history, James Barham, King’s College, Lincoln’s Inn, On the Genesis of Species, Origin of Species, Richard Owen, Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholics, social elite, St. George Jackson Mivart, Thomas Henry Huxley, Wikipedia, William Dembski St. George Jackson Mivart: A Historical Snapshot James Barham September 30, 2025 Evolution, Faith & Science 7 In the end, Darwin, Huxley, and their friends collectively decided to “cut him dead,” meaning to ostracize him socially. Read More ›
ping pong ball Type post Author William A. Dembski Date February 9, 2024 CategoriesComputational SciencesScience Reporting Tagged , algorithms, artificial general intelligence, artificial intelligence, deception, deep fakes, deep learning, democracy, historical figures, hype, images, Neural Networks, post-trust, public opinion, robot, robotics, security, skepticism, trade-offs, trust, video Deep Fakes and Propaganda for Artificial General Intelligence William A. Dembski February 9, 2024 Computational Sciences, Science Reporting 6 The video shows a supposed table tennis match between a robot and a top human player. Yet the video is not of an actual match. Read More ›
Benjamin Tillman Type post Author John G. West Date July 16, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , Africans, baboons, ballot boxes, Benjamin Tillman, black inferiority, Caucasians, Civil War, Democratic Party, Ellenton riot, evolutionary racism, historical figures, lynching, missing links, monkeys, political rights, Racism, scientific racism, South Carolina, statues, stealing elections, U.S. Senate, United States Honored by Statue, Democratic South Carolina Senator Said Some Blacks “Near Akin to Monkey” John G. West July 16, 2021 Bioethics, Evolution 3 Benjamin Tillman was a monster. He publicly defended lynchings. He drew on evolutionary racism to preach black inferiority. Read More ›
Benjamin Tillman Type post Author John G. West Date July 10, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , Africans, baboons, ballot boxes, Benjamin Tillman, black inferiority, Caucasians, Civil War, Democratic Party, Ellenton riot, evolutionary racism, historical figures, lynching, missing links, monkeys, political rights, Racism, scientific racism, South Carolina, statues, stealing elections, U.S. Senate, United States Honored by Statue, Democratic South Carolina Senator Said Some Blacks “Near Akin to Monkey” John G. West July 10, 2020 Bioethics, Evolution 3 Benjamin Tillman was a monster. He publicly defended lynchings. He drew on evolutionary racism to preach black inferiority. Read More ›