Meyer book background image Type post Author Michael Egnor Date December 5, 2022 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignMetaphysicsPhysical Sciences Tagged , Anselm, atheism, Augustinian Proof, Big Bang, Edward Feser, general relativity, ground of existence, ignorance, insanity, intelligent design, Necessary Existence, Ontological Argument, philosophers, Return of the God Hypothesis, Roman Catholic, Stephen Meyer, Thomas Aquinas God Hypothesis: In Defense of Stephen Meyer’s Book Title Michael Egnor December 5, 2022 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Metaphysics, Physical Sciences 5 What Dr. Meyer did was enter the atheist camp, take up their flawed tools, and defeat them with their own weapons. Read More ›
justice 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date September 13, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsCultureEpistemologyFaith & Science Tagged , atheism, Christianity, evil, genocide, Moral Law, morals, Ontological Argument, preferences, PZ Myers, taste Atheists Who Scold Us on Morality Unwittingly Acknowledge God’s Existence Michael Egnor September 13, 2022 Bioethics, Culture, Epistemology, Faith & Science 3 Actually, Christians don’t ask, “Where do your morals come from?” in order to call atheists evil. Read More ›
Gulf Stream Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 9, 2020 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , Anselm, atheism, cognitive science, Discovery Institute, friends, Kurt Gödel, Mind Matters, Ontological Argument, podcast, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Robert J. Marks II, social media, Walter Bradley Center Marks, Bringsjord: Confound Your Atheist Friends with Gödel’s “God Theorem” David Klinghoffer May 9, 2020 Faith & Science 1 You didn’t know that Gödel was a theist and that a proof of God’s existence was discovered among his papers when he died? Well here it is. Read More ›
m106 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date January 6, 2020 CategoriesFaith & SciencePhysical SciencesScientific Reasoning Tagged , __edited, Aristotle, astrophysicist, astrophysics, atheism, Big Bang, cosmic inflation, Darwinian evolution, Ethan Siegel, evidence, evidentialism, Five Ways, general relativity, heresy, inference, inferential science, information, logic, natural theology, non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA), Ontological Argument, properly basic belief, quantum mechanics, reason, red shift, Stephen Jay Gould, theists, Thomas Aquinas, universe Astrophysicist Asks: Did God Create the Universe? Michael Egnor January 6, 2020 Faith & Science, Physical Sciences, Scientific Reasoning 7 Natural theology is the science of God’s existence, and it’s a massive trove of evidence and reason of the first order. Read More ›
unicorn-hunt Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 12, 2019 CategoriesCosmologyFaith & SciencePhilosophy Tagged , __edited, a posteriori argument, a priori, Alvin Plantinga, dog, essence, existence, Five Ways, geometry, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, logic, Ontological Argument, planets, Plato, Platonic forms, René Descartes, science, stars, Thomas Aquinas, unicorns Essence and Existence in Modern Science Michael Egnor October 12, 2019 Cosmology, Faith & Science, Philosophy 6 St. Thomas laid the intellectual groundwork for modern natural science — the absolute distinction between existence and essence. Read More ›