Anna_Ostroumova-Lebedeva_-_Laboratory_-_1915 Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date July 26, 2024 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , biophysicists, experimental science, fantasy science, ID the Future, inferential science, Kirk Durston, philosophers, podcast, reproducibility crisis, science, science fiction, scientific culture Three Types of Science: Experimental Science Andrew McDiarmid July 26, 2024 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 2 Kirk Durston says he has yet to find a true conflict between experimental, reproducible scientific observations and his religious faith. Read More ›
coronavirus Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 4, 2020 CategoriesMedicineOrigin of Life Tagged , atheism, censorship, confirmation bias, coronavirus, COVID-19, Donald Trump, evolution, Evolution News, human evolution, human origins, hydroxychloroquine, Latin America, LinkedIn, macroevolution, malaria, materialism, medicine, Michael Behe, microevolution, scientific culture, The Guardian, The Lancet, The New England Journal of Medicine, World Health Organization Lancet Hydroxychloroquine Paper Scandal Illustrates Scientific Bias, Not Only in Medicine David Klinghoffer June 4, 2020 Medicine, Origin of Life 5 It’s a particularly crude example of how confirmation bias works — how else would you explain this story? — not only among lay people but among top researchers. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 27, 2016 CategoriesEthicsFaith & ScienceSociology Tagged , __tedited, culture, Eugenie Scott, harrassment, human behavior, Lawrence Krauss, misconduct, New Atheism, policy, religious beliefs, Richard Dawkins, Richard Dawkins Foundation, scientific culture, secularism, women You Might Think Twice Before Signing Up for a “Skeptics” Conference David Klinghoffer June 27, 2016 Ethics, Faith & Science, Sociology 3 Thoughtful reader Steve asks, "Do ID conferences ever have to post something like this?" Read More ›