85283df4-0928-4a06-b25e-a75661826d721536x1024 Type post Author William A. Dembski Date January 8, 2026 CategoriesComputational SciencesScience EducationTechnology Tagged , [Un]Intentional, 1 Thessalonians, absolutism, Aristotle, artificial intelligence, Bible, Carl Rogers, ChatGPT, Christians, dopamine, Doug Smith, education, Edward Thorndike, Eighteenth Amendment, ELIZA program, Frederick Buechner, geography, history, Jacques Ellul, Jaime Escalante, Joseph Weizenbaum, Judeo-Christian tradition, large language models, Laurent Siklossy, liquor, Marshall McLuhan, math, mathematicians, Neil Postman, Open AI, Phillips Exeter Academy, programmed learning, Prohibition, Rogerian therapists, Sam Altman, software, St. Paul, Substack, technology, Turing test, William Jennings Bryan Against Anti-LLM and Anti-AI Absolutism William A. Dembski January 8, 2026 Computational Sciences, Science Education, Technology 39 Doug Smith has been a software developer for three decades. He writes extensively about the impact of technology on culture. Read More ›
cute-baby-boy-with-laptop-on-bed-stockpack-adobe-stock-135758804-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date January 17, 2017 CategoriesComputational SciencesTechnology Tagged , __nedited, artificial intelligence, automation, deep learning, education, information, Neil Postman, Neural Networks, neutrality, privacy Turn Over Child-Raising to a Computer? Brendan Dixon January 17, 2017 Computational Sciences, Technology 5 Mattel's new "smart baby monitor," their digital nanny dubbed Aristotle, leaves me flummoxed. Read More ›
image Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date November 29, 2016 CategoriesPolitical ScienceScience ReportingTechnology Tagged , __nedited, algorithms, Big Data, data integrity, data science, elections, failed predictions, hype, machine learning, Nation, Neil Postman, Politics, predictions, Silicon Valley In Election 2016, Why Big Data Took a Tumble Brendan Dixon November 29, 2016 Political Science, Science Reporting, Technology 4 Human judgment and insight, especially trained human judgment and insight, are irreplaceable. Read More ›