roulette wheel Type post Author Neil Thomas Date July 19, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , A. N. Wilson, Benjamin Wiker, chance, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, Daniel Dennett, evolution, Geoffrey Chaucer, Hamlet, Janus, John Herschel, Karl Popper, Lady Fortuna, Lady Luck, natural selection, On the Origin of Species, Oxbridge, Richard Dawkins, St. George Mivart, The Blind Watchmaker, The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, Victorian England, William Whewell The Art of Concealment: Darwin and Chance Neil Thomas July 19, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 13 It is appropriate that Fortuna’s emblematic representation with her ubiquitous wheel should have gone on to become the prototype of the modern roulette wheel. Read More ›
Taking Leave of Darwin Type post Author Neil Thomas Date November 15, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Cicero, common sense, cosmogenic myth, David Hume, Epicurus, evolution, Galen, Geoffrey Chaucer, How I Came to Take Leave of Darwin (series), Lady Fortuna, Lady Luck, Lucretius, materialism, natural selection, Plato, Victorian England How I Came to Take Leave of Darwin: A Coda Neil Thomas November 15, 2021 Evolution, Faith & Science 2 After seeing my recent book through to publication, I began to experience a certain gnawing feeling. Read More ›