artistic-image-of-mother-nature-world-environment-and-mother-764162756-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date September 9, 2025 CategoriesEarth SciencesEnvironment & ClimateEthics Tagged , advisor, capitalism, China, collectivism, director, Dr. Seuss, environmental practices, environmentalism, fauna, flora, free market, golden calf, human thriving, indigenous people, inspiration, investment, Milton Friedman, Mother Earth, mountain, nature rights, New Zealand, nonprofit organizations, ownership, Parry Field, prosperity, radical environmentalism, rainforest, river, Russia, shareholder, St. Petersburg, Steven Moe, stewardship, The Lorax, Truffula, wealth Should We Put Mother Nature on the Board of Directors? Wesley J. Smith September 9, 2025 Earth Sciences, Environment & Climate, Ethics 6 Nature can’t “own” anything. That’s a human construct. Moreover, nature would be represented by environmental “flesh flake” radicals. Read More ›
family Type post Author Nancy Pearcey Date September 15, 2023 CategoriesArtsFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , ancient world, church, cities, civilization, creator, earth, families, female, first couple, Genesis, government, Houston Christian University, humans, image of God, male, music, Nancy Pearcey, nations, school, sciences, stewardship The Meaning of the Image of God Nancy Pearcey September 15, 2023 Arts, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 5 In the ancient world, it was rulers and emperors who were sometimes said to be “the image of God.” Read More ›
crowd Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date August 11, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortionists, anti-humanism, cancer, dairy cows, David Attenborough, diagnosis, ecocide, ecosystem, electricity, food, fuel, humans, Ireland, Jack Kevorkian, Slate, stewardship, terminal illness Environmentalist Misanthropy: Humans Are Terminal Cancer Wesley J. Smith August 11, 2023 Bioethics, Medicine 4 Lest readers dismiss the author and the interviewer as fringe, anti-humanism has become a hallmark of environmentalism. Read More ›
trail in the North Cascades Type post Author Eric Hedin Date July 11, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , British Columbia, earth, freedom, Genesis, human body, human history, humans, intelligent design, J.R.R. Tolkien, minerals, nature, Periodic Table, rare earth elements, stewardship, Washington State Complementary Design: Nature and Gardens Eric Hedin July 11, 2023 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 6 Evidence of intelligent design shines forth when we consider how the complementarity of human need and tended earth enhances the well-being of both. Read More ›
beaver Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 9, 2023 CategoriesEcologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Africa, beavers, carnivores, Darwinism, ecosystem, elephants, engineers, evolution, herbivores, humans, hyenas, intelligent design, lions, mammals, oryx, Stanford University, stewardship, trunks, tusks, vertebrates Beyond Evolutionary Fitness, Mammals Are Ecosystem Engineers David Coppedge February 9, 2023 Ecology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 When animals give back more than they take, does that fit the model of selfishness that Darwinism promotes? Read More ›
Aquinas Type post Author Brian Miller Date November 16, 2022 CategoriesCosmologyEcologyFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , Alasdair MacIntyre, Aristotle, Charles Darwin, creation, de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, Democritus, energy production, error correction, imago Dei, information processing, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, James Tour, materialism, molecules, natural law, Plato, Pope Francis, redemption, Return of the God Hypothesis, Roman Catholic, scientific revolution, Simon Conway Morris, Stephen Meyer, stewardship, teleology, University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Hosts a Conference on Creation, Including Intelligent Design Brian Miller November 16, 2022 Cosmology, Ecology, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 4 The organizers accepted my abstract for a talk about “The Return of Teleology to the Natural Sciences.” Read More ›