sct-owl-2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 18, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScience Reporting Tagged , American Prometheus, Anika Smith, artificial intelligence, atomic bomb, Bhagavad Gita, bioethics, biological origins, Center for Science and Culture, cosmology, COVID-19, Discovery Institute, dissenters, East Coast, evolution, Evolution News, Evolution News and Views, Grok, intelligent design, iPhone, J. Robert Oppenheimer, John West, Kai Bird, Katherine West, Martin Sherwin, masks, media, Nathan Jacobson, National Review, neuroscience, origins science, Phaedrus, Plato, Plato’s Revenge, public health, Richard Sternberg, Sanskrit, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Smithsonian Institution, Stephen Meyer, The Atlantic, The Atlantic Monthly, The Christian Century, The Divine Comedy, University of Colorado, Wall Street Journal Introducing a New Design, and a New Name David Klinghoffer August 18, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Science Reporting 7 Conjoining science with culture, while it is the CSC’s calling card, is not our invention. Read More ›
US_congressional_hearing_on_UAPs_on_26_July_2023_with_Grusch_Graves_and_Fravor Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 6, 2023 CategoriesFaith & SciencePhysical Sciences Tagged , aliens, Aristotle, astrophysicists, Bible, Brian Keating, Carl Jung, Congress, conspiracy, curiosity, Galileo Galilei, government, Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan Experience, NASA, pilots, psychologists, Roman Catholic, Russian, Sanskrit, soul, Spotify, Stephen Meyer, synchronicity, UAPs, UC San Diego, UFOs, United States UFOs Replay History: Rogan, Keating, and “Things Seen in the Skies” David Klinghoffer September 6, 2023 Faith & Science, Physical Sciences 5 Psychologist Carl Jung got interested in UFOs around 1946, shortly after the development of the atom bomb. Read More ›
DNA Type post Author David Berlinski Date June 13, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesMathematicsPlanetology Tagged , addition, algorithms, Andrew Wiles, Anna Karenina, calculus, cyberspace, DNA, double helix, fields, genetic code, Greek, incompleteness theorem, Isaac Newton, Kool-Aid, Kurt Gödel, Leo Tolstoy, mathematician, mechanics, molecular biology, New Hampshire, particles, recipe, Sanskrit, Space Invaders, subtraction, Sudan, TIME, U.S. Constitution, Viagra Iterations of Immortality David Berlinski June 13, 2023 Evolution, Life Sciences, Mathematics, Planetology 14 The calculus made modern science possible, but it was the algorithm that made possible the modern world. Read More ›