1280px-BrownUniversity-UniversityHall Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 5, 2018 CategoriesScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, academic consensus, academic freedom, Brown University, Caroline Crocker, censorship, Darwinian theory, David Coppedge, Eric Hedin, gender dysphoria, Günter Bechly, Harvard Medical School, intelligent design, Lisa Littman, methodology, PLOS ONE, Quillette, Richard Sternberg, Scott Minnich Suppressing Science at Brown University David Klinghoffer September 5, 2018 Science Education, Scientific Freedom 8 Career anxiety is exactly how heterodox thought is policed and stamped out in the academic world. Read More ›
Meyer Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date December 18, 2017 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, "God of the gaps", apologetics, atheism, BioLogos, evolution, heuristic, intelligent design, methodology, nature, science, Stephen Meyer, theism, theistic evolution, truth Stephen Meyer Debunks the “God of the Gaps” Objection David Klinghoffer December 18, 2017 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 3 May I add a further observation? If you don’t mind, ID is not an “apologetic tool,” as BioLogos puts it. Read More ›
Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date May 31, 2016 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, causal agents, causality, causation, defining terms, demarcation criteria, falsifiability, historical sciences, inference to the best explanation, methodological materialism, methodology, motivated reasoning, objectivity, observability, predictive-success, presuppositions, pseudoscience, scientific method, scientific reasoning, testability, worldview Foundational Question: Is Intelligent Design Science? Steve Laufmann May 31, 2016 Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 7 It's long been said that the path to the right answers lies in asking the right questions. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date April 27, 2016 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, Alvin Plantinga, animals, biases, C. S. Lewis, cherry-picking fallacy, circular reasoning, education, human capacities, human condition, human nature, inference, John West, lawyers, methodology, Nancy Pearcey, naturalism, nonsense, objectivity, people, psychology, reasoning, scientific advance, scientific method, technological advancement, trust in scientists Lawyer, Scientist, or Animal? Choosing Between Evolution and Human Reason Sarah Chaffee April 27, 2016 Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 4 Darwinism undercuts human reason. That's bad news for science. Read More ›