Merfeld,_Wildpferdefang_--_2014_--_0639 2 Type post Author Terrell Clemmons Date April 7, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , Aldous Huxley, Bible, biology, chemists, Darwinism, intelligent design, J. Budziszewski, jobs, materialistic paradigm, meaning, media, morality, natural law theory, Pandemic of Lunacy, peer pressure, Phillip Johnson, promotion, snake handlers, social status, status signaling, University of Texas at Austin, yahoos Status Signaling in the Herd: Why Otherwise Good Scientists Sneer at Intelligent Design Terrell Clemmons April 7, 2026 Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 7 "Here is Johnson, giving a very studious argument for ID, and the other fellow thinks it’s sufficient to say, 'I know it's wrong because my friend told me.'" Read More ›
pia11777orig Type post Author Bruce Gordon Date March 11, 2026 CategoriesCosmologyPhysics Tagged , Alex O’Connor, Aristotelian cosmos, Copernican displacement, cosmic enormity, cosmic scale, cosmology, Dante, demotion, divine hiddenness, fine-tuning, fine-tuning argument, Hell, human centrality, intelligent cause, intelligibility, methodology, motivation, natural philosophy, naturalism, posteriors, priors, promotion, Psalms, Robert B. Stewart, Satan, scientific revolution, Scripture, Sean Carroll, Stephen Meyer, The Blackwell Companion to Christian Apologetics, The Fine-Tuning Argument and Its Cultured Despisers (series), theism, theology, Timothy McGrew, universe Sean Carroll and the Counter-Evidence Considered Bruce Gordon March 11, 2026 Cosmology, Physics 9 My present concern is to articulate and confront Carroll's charge that the fine-tuning argument engages in some evidential shenanigans. Read More ›