Percy Bysshe Shelley Type post Author Neil Thomas Date March 13, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Asia, atheism, Charles Lyell, Christianity, Daniel Dennett, E Conchis Omnia, Enlightenment, Erasmus Darwin, First Cause, fundamentalism, Garden of Eden, God Hypothesis, Higher Criticism, Lamarckian theory, literalism, Louis Agassiz, Nick Spencer, Noah’s Ark, Noah’s Flood, On the Origin of Species, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Pierre-Simon Laplace, quantum weirdness, Richard Dawkins, Richard Swinburne, The Necessity of Atheism, The Varieties of Religious Experience, Uncertainty Principle, Victorian England, William James, William Lane Craig Shelley, Darwin, and the 19th-Century God Debate Neil Thomas March 13, 2024 Evolution, Faith & Science 19 The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley threw down the gauntlet for what was effectively to become the great Victorian dispute about religious faith. Read More ›
Bust of Rudolf Bultmann Type post Author Neil Thomas Date July 8, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionFaith & ScienceGeology Tagged , catastrophism, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, demythologization, evolution, faith, Hell, James Hutton, jesus, mythology, Noah’s Flood, On the Origin of Species, Principles of Geology, Rudolf Bultmann, saltations, special creation, Theory of the Earth, uniformitarianism Darwin, Lyell, and Demythologization Neil Thomas July 8, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Faith & Science, Geology 7 The term demythologization is today most frequently associated with the mid 20th-century German theologian Rudolf Bultmann. Read More ›