replica of Galileo's telescope Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 6, 2022 CategoriesFaith & SciencePhysical Sciences Tagged , atheism, Christianity, conflict myth, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, faith, Galileo Affair, Galileo Galilei, lunar phases, Michael Keas, Moon, religion, Science, scientism, Venus, YouTube videos Michael Keas: Faith, Science, and the Phases of Venus David Klinghoffer September 6, 2022 Faith & Science, Physical Sciences 2 Dr. Keas explains, among things, the role that Venus with its phases, like those of our Moon, played in advancing astronomy into the modern age. Read More ›
moonlight-1 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 15, 2019 CategoriesAstronomyFaith & ScienceMetaphysicsPhilosophy Tagged , __edited, a posteriori argument, a priori, act, Big Bang, Big Crunch, causation, change, cosmological arguments, existence, First Way, Five Ways, law of non-contradiction, logic, lunar phases, Moon, moonlight, Necessary Existence, potency, reflection, sun, Third Way, Thomas Aquinas Aquinas’ Third Way: An Analogy to Moonlight Michael Egnor October 15, 2019 Astronomy, Faith & Science, Metaphysics, Philosophy 6 Imagine that you are an astronomer on a world with one moon. It is always night on your world, and the moon is the only body in the sky. Read More ›