banquet Type post Author John G. West Date December 25, 2024 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , An American Life, arms control, atheism, birds’ eggs, birthday, butterflies, capitalism, Christianity, Douglas Brinkley, evil empire, faith and science, Galesburg, General Secretary, Greeks, Illinois, intelligent design, Jews, Jimmy Carter, Kremlin, Lessons My Father Taught Me, Mars, Michael Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev, Moscow, Moslems, National Prayer Breakfast, notetaker, Otangelo Grasso, Paul Kengor, political freedom, Protestants, Reagan Presidential Library and Museum, Red Square, Romans, Ron Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Russian Orthodox Church, Soviet Union, St. Catherine’s Hall, The Notes, The Reagan Diaries, U.S. Constitution, Ukrainian Catholics, Whittaker Chambers, Witness Merry Christmas! No. 8 Story of 2024: Reagan’s Personal Argument for Intelligent Design John G. West December 25, 2024 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 14 An untold story from the final year of Reagan’s Presidency about science, faith, and intelligent design. Read More ›
banquet Type post Author John G. West Date January 29, 2024 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , An American Life, arms control, atheism, birds’ eggs, birthday, butterflies, capitalism, Christianity, Douglas Brinkley, evil empire, Galesburg, General Secretary, Greeks, Illinois, intelligent design, Jews, Jimmy Carter, Kremlin, Lessons My Father Taught Me, Mars, Michael Reagan, Mikhail Gorbachev, Moscow, Moslems, National Prayer Breakfast, notetaker, Otangelo Grasso, Paul Kengor, political freedom, Protestants, Reagan Presidential Library and Museum, Red Square, Romans, Ron Reagan, Ronald Reagan, Russian Orthodox Church, Soviet Union, St. Catherine’s Hall, The Notes, The Reagan Diaries, U.S. Constitution, Ukrainian Catholics, Whittaker Chambers, Witness Ronald Reagan’s Deeply Personal Argument for Intelligent Design John G. West January 29, 2024 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 13 An untold story from the final year of Reagan’s Presidency about science, faith, and intelligent design. Read More ›
Darwinism Type post Date June 2, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , "survival of the fittest", appendix, BioEssays, California Science Center, cells, censorship, chimpanzees, choking, Christians, Communist Party, conferences, Current Biology, Darwin Devolves, Darwinian theory, Dave Speijer, Dover trial, dysteleology, epiglottis, Heretic, intelligent design, J.B.S. Haldane, Judge John E. Jones, Kremlin, Matti Leisola, methodological naturalism, Michael Behe, Norway, peasants, Richard Dawkins, Richard Sternberg, social media, speech, Stephen Jay Gould, Uncommon Descent, University of Oslo Darwin’s Desperation? Science and Culture June 2, 2020 Evolution 9 Darwinists easily obtain a global microphone to rant against intelligent design, while ID advocates silently gain adherents. Is it a sign of desperation? Read More ›
Karl Marx Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 3, 2018 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, Charles Darwin, Communism, economics, evolution, Friedrich Engels, Gori, Hannah Arendt, history, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, John the Baptist, Joseph Stalin, Karl Marx, Kremlin, Malcolm Muggeridge, natural selection, Niall Ferguson, On the Origin of Species, Soviet Union, The Descent of Man, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Trofim Lysenko, Ukraine, V.I. Lenin Karl Marx at 200 — Darwinism & Communism David Klinghoffer May 3, 2018 Evolution 11 The men who translated Marxism into practical political terms in the form of Soviet terror were evolutionary thinkers. Read More ›