Steven Weinberg Type post Author Paul Nelson Date August 14, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifePhysical Sciences Tagged , A Brief History of Time, alpha male, Baylor University, Bruce Gordon, cosmological constant, cosmos, Francis Crick, insanity, intelligent design, John Barrow, John Horgan, Nobel laureates, Paul Davies, Peter Atkins, physicists, Richard Dawkins, Stephen Hawking, Steven Weinberg, Texas, The Nature of Nature, William A. Dembski John Horgan on the Madness of “Scientific Omniscience” Paul Nelson August 14, 2023 Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Physical Sciences 3 “As for life, Dawkins’s claim that it is no longer a mystery is absurd. We still don’t have a clue how life began." Read More ›
Ghost Nebula Type post Author Brian Miller Date October 16, 2020 CategoriesFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , Bernard Carr, Earth-like planets, electromagnetic force, electrons, George Ellis, gravity, heavy elements, intelligent design, John Barrow, Luke Barnes, oxygen, Paul Davies, Sabine Hossenfelder, supernova, temperatures, theoretical physics Physicist Sabine Hossenfelder Challenges the Evidence for Cosmological Fine-Tuning Brian Miller and Stephen C. Meyer October 16, 2020 Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 5 Hossenfelder’s strongest argument is that many fine-tuning parameters cannot in fact be quantified. Read More ›
William_Whewell_portrait (1) Type post Date November 30, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Russel Wallace, Circumstellar Habitable Zone, intelligent design, John Barrow, Lawrence J. Henderson, Man’s Place in the Universe, Michael Denton, NASA, Simon Conway Morris, The Fitness of the Environment, The Wonder of Water, water, William Whewell Water — One of the Oldest Design Arguments Science and Culture November 30, 2017 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 4 Today scientists marvel at the many associations among water chemistry, the environment, and life. Read More ›