Statue_of_Charles_Darwin_Natural_History_Museum_London_2020_02 Type post Author Richard Weikart Date December 11, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, August Weismann, Cambridge University Press, Darwin Mythology, group selection, John Hedley Brooke, Michael Ruse, mythology, On the Origin of Species, Samuel Wilberforce, The Descent of Man, Thomas Henry Huxley A New Scholarly Book Trying to Debunk Myths about Charles Darwin and His Theory Richard Weikart December 11, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Some debunkers need to be debunked themselves, because instead of correcting falsehoods, they end up creating or perpetuating falsehoods. Read More ›
Richard-Owen Type post Author Michael Flannery Date July 27, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , African Americans, Charles Darwin, chimpanzees, Civil War, Darwin Day, Darwin’s Sacred Cause, evolution, Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis, John Hedley Brooke, Michael Denton, natural selection, Paul Broca, Racism, Richard Owen, Robert Chambers, The Descent of Man, Thomas Henry Huxley, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation Richard Owen and Charles Darwin on Race: A Study in Contrasts Michael Flannery July 27, 2021 Bioethics, Evolution 6 Darwin was unquestionably a racist, arguing that civilization would advance even at the cost of inevitable racial extermination. Read More ›
Dinornis1387 Type post Author Michael Flannery Date January 14, 2020 CategoriesHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __edited, African Americans, Charles Darwin, chimpanzees, Civil War, Darwin Day, Darwin’s Sacred Cause, evolution, Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis, John Hedley Brooke, Michael Denton, natural selection, Paul Broca, Racism, Richard Owen, Robert Chambers, The Descent of Man, Thomas Henry Huxley, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation Richard Owen and Charles Darwin on Race: A Study in Contrasts Michael Flannery January 14, 2020 Human Origins and Anthropology 6 Darwin was unquestionably a racist, arguing that civilization would advance even at the cost of inevitable racial extermination. Read More ›
image Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 25, 2014 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHistory of ScienceScience Education Tagged , __nedited, Cosmos (series), integration, Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, John Hedley Brooke, laws of nature, Myth of the Dark Ages, natural philosophy, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Robert Boyle, Royal Society, science and religion Cosmos Scrubs Religion’s Positive Influence from the History of the Scientific Revolution Casey Luskin March 25, 2014 Faith & Science, History of Science, Science Education 13 Materialists project a religion-friendly image because popular culture expects it, while at the same time they make arguments to erode religious belief. Read More ›