KarlPopper1902-1994Nr104bustbronzeintheArkade Type post Date March 11, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionPhilosophy of Science Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, Darwin's House of Cards, Discovery Institute Press, evolution, evolutionary theory, Galileo Galilei, John C. Eccles, Karl Popper, Michael Flannery, natural selection, nature, offspring, parents, philosophy of science, purpose, sexual selection, Tom Bethell On Natural Selection, Popper’s Posthumous Gift Science & Culture March 11, 2026 Evolution, Philosophy of Science 2 If philosopher of science Karl Popper wanted to leave a gift for those who came after to puzzle over and discuss, he couldn’t have chosen more astutely. Read More ›
KarlPopper1902-1994Nr104bustbronzeintheArkade Type post Author Michael Flannery Date March 10, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , birth, brain, conception, Elliott Sober, epigenetic inheritance, evolution, Evolution of the Brain, evolutionary theory, fetus, individuality, intelligent design, John C. Eccles, Karl Popper, lottery, Mehmet Elgin, mind, natural selection, neuroscience, purpose, purposeful nature, recant, recantation, spiritual creation, testability, The Self and Its Brain, theology, uniqueness Popper and Purposeful Nature: A Note on the So-Called “Recantation” Michael Flannery March 10, 2026 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 2 A correspondent raises this famous statement of Karl Popper on natural selection, with his “historically loaded word ‘recant.’” Read More ›