Holybiblebook Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 15, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Antony Flew, Barbara Forrest, Charles Darwin, Christianity, Cicero, creationism, creator, David dewolf, Edwards v. Aguillard, Eugenie Scott, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, F. C. S. Schiller, Fred Hoyle, intelligent agent, intelligent causes, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, John E. Jones, John Haught, John West, Jonathan Witt, Kitzmiller v. Dover, Michael Behe, Michael Denton, Michael Polanyi, molecular machines, New York Times, Of Pandas and People, Pennsylvania, philosophy, religion, Richard Dawkins, scientific method, Scott Minnich, Supreme Court, Ten Myths About Dover, textbooks, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Thomas Aquinas, William Dembski, William Paley Ten Myths About Dover: No. 7, “Showed ID Is ‘Religious’ and a Form of ‘Creationism’” Casey Luskin December 15, 2025 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 42 Is intelligent design actually religious? Is it a form of Christianity? We can immediately see that it is not. Read More ›
Thomas Aquinas Type post Author Ann Gauger Date April 18, 2023 CategoriesBiologyCosmologyEvolutionFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignMetaphysicsPhysics Tagged , Apostle Paul, biosphere, Brown University, cognitive dissonance, creation, creator, DNA, Edward Feser, evolution, evolutionary biology, faith and science, Genesis, Georgetown University, Gerard Manley Hopkins, God's Grandeur, In the Beginning, intelligent design, Jesuits, John Haught, Kenneth Miller, life, materialism, molecular biology, monogenesis, Pope Benedict XVI, quantum indeterminacy, Richard Dawkins, Roman Catholic, scientific materialism, Scripture, Stephen Barr, Teilhard de Chardin, theistic evolution, theistic evolutionists, theologians Shall We Baptize Darwin? A Catholic Biologist Reflects Ann Gauger April 18, 2023 Biology, Cosmology, Evolution, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Metaphysics, Physics 13 Theistic evolutionists are baptizing a theory first composed by Darwin as a substitute for the doctrine of special Creation. Read More ›
Peppered Moth Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date August 14, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, "God of the gaps", American Association for the Advancement of Science, Association of Theological Schools, Christianity, Darwinian evolution, Ian Barbour, ideology, industrial melanism, John Haught, Luther College, Michael Ruse, peppered moth, religion, Roman Catholic, scholars, science, The Mystery of Evolutionary Mechanisms, theology Have Religion Scholars Been Deceived by Darwin? Robert Shedinger August 14, 2019 Evolution 5 On the relationship between religion on science, few scholars have been more influential than the late Ian Barbour, a physicist and theologian. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 3, 2011 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, atheism, debate, Islam, Jerry Coyne, John Haught, Judaism The Two Types of Atheists David Klinghoffer November 3, 2011 Faith & Science 1 I find much the same distinction is to be made, incidentally, regarding religious believers who fancy themselves critics of other faiths. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 2, 2011 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, atheism, debate, Discovery Institute, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, John Haught, New Scientist Haught v. Coyne: The Debate of the Century (Not) David Klinghoffer November 2, 2011 Faith & Science 1 "If you're smart you know that there's no such thing as angels, but there is such a thing as evolution." And more of this nature. Read More ›