Working Man Type post Date August 30, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, Alfred Russel Wallace, beetles, butterflies, Charles Darwin, Indiana Jones, Janet Browne, Labor Day, Lepidoptera, Michael Flannery, Robert McCormick, Samuel Stevens, South America, summer For Labor Day Weekend: Alfred Russel Wallace, Scientist and Working Man Science & Culture August 30, 2019 Evolution 4 Take a moment to consider the impact of labor on the development of evolutionary theory. Read More ›
Wallace_frog Type post Author Michael Flannery Date August 2, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Russel Wallace, Arthur Koestler, Charles Darwin, creationism, Daniel Dennett, Darwinism, Edinburgh University, evolution, history, intelligent evolution, natural theology, On the Origin of Species, penicillin, socialism, South America, spiritualism, teleology, Thomas Kuhn, Victorians, William Paley Alfred Russel Wallace’s Greatest Journey Michael Flannery August 2, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 Wallace’s formulation of evolution was quite incompatible with Darwin’s. His theory might be called intelligent evolution. Read More ›
Wallace Type post Author Michael Flannery Date July 30, 2018 CategoriesBotanyEvolution Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Russel Wallace, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, evolution, HMS Beagle, Joseph Hooker, Linnean Society, Michael Flannery, Nature's Prophet, Robert Chambers, Samuel Stevens, Sarawak Law, South America, The Malay Archipelago, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation Alfred Russel Wallace: A Life in Science, Rediscovered Michael Flannery July 30, 2018 Botany, Evolution 8 Despite the notoriety of Wallace in his own day, he remains a comparatively obscure figure in the history of biology. Read More ›
dog surfing Type post Author Günter Bechly Date June 27, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Alfred Russel Wallace, Atlantic Ocean, biogeography, Casey Luskin, common ancestry, Donald Prothero, George Gaylord Simpson, Gondwana, Madagascar, molecular clock, New World monkeys, New Zealand, rafting, South America Rafting Stormy Waters: When Biogeography Contradicts Common Ancestry Günter Bechly June 27, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 18 The orderly pattern of biogeographic distribution of plants and animals was one of the lines of evidence that Charles Darwin mentioned in support of his theory. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date April 28, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionZoology Tagged , __tedited, Africa, biodiversity, biogeography, biological origins, circular causality, evolutionary assumptions, foxes, land mammals, monkeys, navigation, ocean, plausibility, rafting, rafting animals, scientific reasoning, Sherlock Holmes, South America, vegetation The Curious Incident of the Non-Rafting Foxes David Klinghoffer April 28, 2016 Evolution, Zoology 8 It should be the facts that drive startling conclusions, not the theory that's supposed to explain the facts. Read More ›