Spaceship_entering_portal_to_another_part_in_the_universe Type post Author Eric Hedin Date June 24, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignTechnology Tagged , Blaise Pascal, computational power, Denyse O'Leary, interstellar travel, miniaturization, Moore’s law, Mount St. Helens, natural processes, smartphones, video games, weather forecasts, William Shakespeare Have We Become Addicted to Change? Eric Hedin June 24, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Technology 7 A sci-fi author wrote of spaceship pilots using slide rules to calculate their course corrections while on interstellar journeys! Read More ›
Neil-deGrasse-Tyson Type post Author Mike Keas Date April 27, 2020 CategoriesPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Ann Druyan, Bible, Big Bang, Carl Sagan, Christianity, Cosmos: Possible Worlds, COVID-19, Deep Ecology, Earth Day, Easter, Encyclopedia Galactica, eschatology, Evolution News, Fox Broadcasting Company, Genesis, interstellar travel, jesus, Johannes Kepler, Mother Earth, Mother Nature, National Geographic Channel, Neil deGrasse Tyson, teleology, Tree of Life, Unbelievable Echoing the Bible, Cosmos Concludes with a Materialist Origins Myth and Future Heavenly Bliss Mike Keas April 27, 2020 Physical Sciences 10 Tyson ends his summary of cosmic history with a soaring narrative focused on earth. It sounds like the exalted prose of the book of Genesis. Read More ›
Odometer Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date July 18, 2019 CategoriesAstronomyPhysical Sciences Tagged , __edited, Apollo moon landings, earth, Earth’s crust, fossil fuels, galaxies, Hubble Space Telescope, humans, hydrogen, intelligent design, interstellar travel, kerosene, Miami, Milky Way, minerals, Moon, oxygen, perfect solar eclipses, satellite TV, Saturn V, solar system, stars Remembering the First Manned Moon Landing at 50; What Does the Future Hold? Guillermo Gonzalez July 18, 2019 Astronomy, Physical Sciences 7 I remember watching the Apollo moon landings on TV from 1969 to 1972 as a child. Read More ›