The Miracle of Man Type post Author Michael Denton Date May 11, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, ancient Greece, atomism, Bridgewater Treatises, Chance and Necessity, Darwinism, Democritus, evolution, Friedrich Nietzsche, George Wald, imago Dei, intelligent design, Jacques Monod, Lawrence Henderson, materialism, natural selection, pre-Socratic philosophers, Stephen Jay Gould, Stone Age, The Fitness of the Environment, The Miracle of Man, The Miracle of the Cell, Western civilization How We Moved Beyond Darwin to the Miracle of Man Michael Denton May 11, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 The extraordinary ensembles of natural environmental fitness described in my book are thoroughly documented scientific facts. Read More ›
Phoenix-Fabelwesen Type post Author Neil Thomas Date January 26, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhilosophy Tagged , Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Charles Darwin and the Ghost of Epicurus (series), Cicero, David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Enlightenment, Erasmus Darwin, evolution, Galen, intelligent design, Lucretius, Phoenix, Plato, pre-Socratic philosophers, Stoics, Thomas Aquinas The Enlightenment (Re)turn to Atomism Neil Thomas January 26, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Philosophy 8 What distinguished thinkers had long called out for its manifest absurdity was now, Phoenix-like, rising from the ashes. Read More ›
Aquinas Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 3, 2019 CategoriesFaith & ScienceMetaphysicsPhilosophy Tagged , __edited, a posteriori argument, act, Aristotelianism, Aristotle, Five Ways, Jerry Coyne, law of non-contradiction, mechanical philosophy, nature, potency, pre-Socratic philosophers, Prime Mover, quantum mechanics, Thomas Aquinas, Werner Heisenberg Introducing Aquinas’ Five Ways Michael Egnor October 3, 2019 Faith & Science, Metaphysics, Philosophy 12 In my ongoing debate with biologist Jerry Coyne, frequent reference is made to Aquinas’ Five Ways, particularly to his Prime Mover argument. Read More ›
Max Delbrück Type post Author Michael Egnor Date August 25, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, abiogenesis, Aristotle, biophysics, DNA, intelligence, Max Delbrück, molecular genetics, Nobel Prize, pre-Socratic philosophers, sperm, viruses, Watson and Crick DNA, Information, and Aristotle’s Nobel Prize Michael Egnor August 25, 2017 Intelligent Design 4 Max Delbrück (1906-1981) was a biophysicist and Nobel laureate who made seminal discoveries in the DNA-based replication of viruses. Read More ›