Archaeopteryx Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date December 8, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , Cambrian Explosion, Casey Luskin, Charles Darwin, Darwinism, evolution, evolutionists, explosions, fossil record, fossils, Friedrich Nietzsche, Homo (genus), intelligent design, Leonard Sax, population genetics, Return of the God Hypothesis, Science Uprising, waiting-time problem Luskin: The Dead Talk Back to Darwin David Klinghoffer December 8, 2021 Evolution, Paleontology 3 The “dreadful beasts, grinning knowingly,” have a message for evolutionists: “no further in this direction!” Read More ›
Stephen Meyer Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date December 8, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , ambiguity, atheism, book reviews, Christopher Hitchens, Claremont Review of Books, creator, Darwinian evolution, Darwinism, David Gelernter, evolution, existence, Friedrich Nietzsche, intelligent design, Leonard Sax, materialism, mathematician, meaning, MIT, physicians, psychologists, Return of the God Hypothesis, Stephen Meyer, University of Pennsylvania, Yale University Leonard Sax on Intelligent Design and the “Ambiguity of the Evidence” David Klinghoffer December 8, 2021 Bioethics, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 5 Stephen Meyer offers but does not seek to compel the choice to affirm a transcendent origin of the universe. Read More ›
newborn Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date December 4, 2020 CategoriesMedicine Tagged , ambiguous genitals, babies, biological sexes, boys, brains, chromosomes, Colin Wright, females, feminists, gametes, genitalia, girls, human behavior, intersex people, Jerry Coyne, John Money, Leonard Sax, males, ova, Simone de Beauvoir, sperm, surgery, transgenderism, Transgenderism Series Is It a Boy or a Girl? Jonathan Wells December 4, 2020 Medicine 6 Parents with a new baby are almost always asked, “Is it a boy or a girl?” And the answer is almost always one or the other. Read More ›