The Thinker Type post Author David Coppedge Date January 16, 2024 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindScientific Freedom Tagged , 1984 (novel), Bertrand Russell, bias, Big Brother, C.S. Lewis, causation, clinical psychology, Darwinian evolution, determinism, Enlightenment, epistemic virtues, evolution, free will, George Orwell, J.P. Moreland, libertarian free will, logic, Miracles (book), Nicholas Caputo, North Korea, rigor, The Conversation, The Design Inference, theists, thought police, Trinity College Dublin, United Nations, William A. Dembski, William Provine, Winston Ewert, Woodrow Wilson Freethinking Cannot Be Darwinized David Coppedge January 16, 2024 Neuroscience & Mind, Scientific Freedom 8 An otherwise good essay on the human right to freedom of thought falls into a Darwinian trap of illogical causation. Read More ›
computer Type post Date September 18, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Brent Spiner, Darwinism, Forensics, intelligent design, Mind Matters, Nature (journal), Nicholas Caputo, peer review, PNAS, Robert J. Marks II, Silicon Valley, Sleeping Beauty, William A. Dembski Detecting Malicious Intent in Undisputed Design Science and Culture September 18, 2021 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 9 Within clearly designed objects, malicious intents can lurk. Intelligent design theory handles those, too, and should. Read More ›
mantid Type post Date October 22, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , bacteria, Darwinism, deception, drugs, Forensics, gravity, humans, Jerry Coyne, lying, Mount Rushmore, Nicholas Caputo, postmodernism, Return of the God Hypothesis, Royal Society, Stephen Meyer, torture, University of Portsmouth, Why Evolution Is True, William A. Dembski Design Filter Is Best Bet for Finding Liars Science and Culture October 22, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 Not all intelligent design is benevolent. Design can deceive. Can ID techniques filter the true from the false? Read More ›