PrincetownAUPortCampbellNationalParkTwelveApostle Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date July 7, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , attorneys, biology, Casey Luskin, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, Darwinian evolution, defining id, defining science, definist fallacy, demarcation criteria, evidence, evidence for id, evolution, geologists, historical sciences, ID research program, intelligent design, lawyers, natural world, peer-reviewed literature, predictive-success, Research, science, scientific method, testability The Divide Between Science and Non-Science David Klinghoffer July 7, 2025 Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 2 The most commonly heard charge against ID is that it “isn’t science” and therefore can’t even be evaluated as a scientific alternative to Darwinian evolution. Read More ›
Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date May 31, 2016 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, causality, causation, defining terms, demarcation criteria, falsifiability, historical sciences, inference to the best explanation, methodological materialism, methodology, motivated reasoning, objectivity, predictive-success, presuppositions, pseudoscience, scientific method, scientific reasoning, testability, worldview Foundational Question: Is Intelligent Design Science? Steve Laufmann May 31, 2016 Intelligent Design, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 7 It's long been said that the path to the right answers lies in asking the right questions. Read More ›
closeup-of-pink-flamingo-stockpack-adobe-stock-305825877-stockpack-adobestock Type post Date December 22, 2015 CategoriesEvolutionGenetics Tagged , __nedited, beauty, ENCODE, genes, genome, genomics, human genome, junk DNA, mutations, Nature, predictions, predictive-success, Research, vestigial structures, yeast Why Would Evolution Produce Non-Essential Genes? Science & Culture December 22, 2015 Evolution, Genetics 8 Life is incredibly vibrant with "useless" beauty. One suspects that genotypic evidence will follow suit. Read More ›