Merfeld,_Wildpferdefang_--_2014_--_0639 2 Type post Author Terrell Clemmons Date April 7, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , Aldous Huxley, Bible, biology, chemists, Darwinism, intelligent design, J. Budziszewski, jobs, materialistic paradigm, meaning, media, morality, natural law theory, Pandemic of Lunacy, peer pressure, Phillip Johnson, promotion, snake handlers, social status, status signaling, University of Texas at Austin, yahoos Status Signaling in the Herd: Why Otherwise Good Scientists Sneer at Intelligent Design Terrell Clemmons April 7, 2026 Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 7 "Here is Johnson, giving a very studious argument for ID, and the other fellow thinks it’s sufficient to say, 'I know it's wrong because my friend told me.'" Read More ›
ai-artificial-intelligencedigital-chatbot-man-chatting-with-787225949-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Peter Biles Date February 27, 2026 CategoriesComputational SciencesEthicsTechnology Tagged , artificial intelligence, chatbots, ChatGPT, cheating, culture, environment, ethics, jobs, Julie Jargon, Leo Gurney, London, parents, privacy, social media, students, teachers, technology, teens, Wall Street Journal, young people Good News: Young People Are Skeptical of AI — Even if Their Parents Aren’t Peter Biles February 27, 2026 Computational Sciences, Ethics, Technology 3 ChatGPT. Every student uses it to write papers. So goes the pervading fear, that is. Read More ›
brain-mind-psychology-and-confusion-concept-art-3d-illustrat-583923905-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author John Zmirak Date August 28, 2025 CategoriesEthicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Aristotle, brain, careers, causation, Christof Koch, Denyse O’Leary, epiphenomena, families, free will, jobs, machines, materialism, Michael Egnor, mind, moral responsibility, neuroscience, neuroscientists, neurosurgeons, philosophers, Plato, promotions, Saint Augustine, scientists, sexual abuse, soul, The Immortal Mind, theologians, worldview Conversation with Dr. Egnor: Are We Meat Machines, and Why Does It Matter? John Zmirak August 28, 2025 Ethics, Neuroscience & Mind 7 I found yours to be a fascinating and persuasive book on a crucial subject. You lay out the issues starkly. Read More ›
Charles Darwin Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date October 1, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Darwinism, evolution, funding, intelligent design, Is Darwinism a Theory in Crisis? (tribute series), jobs, Karl Popper, natural selection, paradigm, Research, scientific revolutions, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, theory, Thomas Kuhn, truth, unguided processes Theory in Crisis? Some Cautionary Words Jonathan Wells October 1, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 4 Philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn was criticized for various inconsistencies in his argument. Read More ›
Charles Darwin Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date October 14, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Darwinism, evolution, funding, intelligent design, Is Darwinism a Theory in Crisis? (series), jobs, Karl Popper, natural selection, paradigm, Research, scientific revolutions, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, theory, Thomas Kuhn, truth, unguided processes Theory in Crisis? Some Cautionary Words Jonathan Wells October 14, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 4 Philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn was criticized for various inconsistencies in his argument. Read More ›
running robots 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 27, 2018 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __k-review, artificial intelligence, Civil War, farming, history, Industrial Revolution, Jay Richards, jobs, liberalism, robots, Rod Dreher, socialism, The Human Advantage, unemployment, United States, Utopia Richards: Using Artificial Intelligence to Sell the Welfare State David Klinghoffer June 27, 2018 Neuroscience & Mind 3 There’s an undoubted sense of crisis in the air. Read More ›