mario-dobelmann-QKBc8uYQDH0-unsplash Type post Author Eric Hedin Date January 28, 2025 CategoriesBiologyFaith & ScienceLinguisticsPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , beauty, brain, choice, consciousness, creativity, death, Denyse O'Leary, Emily Reeves, engineers, functional complexity, harmony, human being, immaterial genome, intelligence, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, life after death, living things, meaning, Mind Matters, nature, near-death experiences, Philip Ball, physicists, proportion, purpose, Return of the God Hypothesis, Richard Sternberg, Stephen Meyer What Lies Beyond Death? A Physicist’s Take Eric Hedin January 28, 2025 Biology, Faith & Science, Linguistics, Physical Sciences, Physics 6 The very existence of life — the fact that we are here at all to the pose the question — calls for something more than physical nature. Read More ›
panda Type post Author Stephen Dilley Date April 5, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Charles Darwin, creationism, devolution, evolution, harmony, intelligent design, Louis Agassiz, Natural Theology (book), Panda's Thumb, proportion, Religions (journal), St. Paul, Stephen Jay Gould, suboptimality, symmetry, theology, William A. Dembski, William Paley, Young Earth Creationists Gould’s God-Talk: Is the Panda’s Thumb Incompatible with ID? Stephen Dilley April 5, 2024 Evolution, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 12 Stephen Jay Gould was renowned as a paleontologist, not as a theologian. Yet perhaps his most iconic argument is theological in nature. Read More ›
zebra finches Type post Author Ann Gauger Date June 29, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, aesthetics, anthropomorphizing, balance, beauty, birds, elegance, harmony, peacock, proportion, sexual selection, UC Irvine Do Animals Recognize Beauty? Ann Gauger June 29, 2018 Intelligent Design 4 One must separate beauty from mate choice in order to tell if animals recognize beauty. Read More ›