RonaldReaganFederalBuildingandCourthouseentryHarrisbu Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date December 2, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLegal Science (jurisprudence)Science Education Tagged , ACLU, Antony Flew, attorneys, biology, Cambrian animals, Cambrian Explosion, Christians, cricket (sport), Darwinism, Discovery Institute, Dover trial, education, evolution, George W. Bush, H. L. Mencken, Harrisburg, Henry Quastler, Hollywood, information, Inherit the Wind, intelligent design, John E. Jones III, Kitzmiller v. Dover, Michael Behe, natural processes, Pennsylvania, philosophy of science, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, Pulitzer Prize, Robert Crowther, Scopes Monkey Trial, Spencer Tracy, Stephen Meyer, Summer for the Gods, theists, theology, William Paley, Williams Jennings Bryan Dover Days: A Fatuous Decision Is About to Turn 20 Years Old Jonathan Witt December 2, 2025 Intelligent Design, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Science Education 13 Judge Jones looked my way, and his expression seemed full of fellow feeling, as if to say, “Don’t sweat it. I’m all about free speech. I’ve got your back.” Read More ›
magic-imaginary-world-full-with-color-and-happiness-generati-566185650-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date September 22, 2025 CategoriesEpistemologyEvolutionScientific Reasoning Tagged , Carole Hooven, Clarence Darrow, Colin Wright, common descent, Darwinists, Edward Larson, evidence, evolutionary biology, folk beliefs, fundamentalism, gravity, human origins, Jerry Coyne, logic, New York Times, Parting Shot, private truth, public truth, reason, Richard Dawkins, Scopes Monkey Trial, subjectivism, Summer for the Gods, Tennessee, The Story of Testosterone, University of Chicago, William Jennings Bryan In Science, the Rising Power of Private Truth Denyse O’Leary September 22, 2025 Epistemology, Evolution, Scientific Reasoning 4 Many people experience a vast liberation when they are freed from the constraints of logic, reason, and evidence. Read More ›
420885846blb0304-6rev0 Type post Author David Coppedge Date July 15, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , academic freedom, ACLU, Bible, Bolton Davidheiser, Casey Luskin, censorship, Clarence Darrow, Darwinian evolution, Dayton, Democrats, Dudley Field Malone, Edward Larson, freedom, fundamentalists, Haeckel’s embryos, history, Holocaust, Horatio Hockett Newman, Human Zoos, Icons of Evolution, Inherit the Wind, intelligent design, Johns Hopkins University, Jonathan Wells, March of Man, Maynard Metcalf, Phillip E. Johnson, Scopes trial, Social Darwinism, Summer for the Gods, Supreme Court, Teaching Company, The Daily Wire, University of Chicago, William Jennings Bryan, Zombie Science Inhibit the Mind? Scopes Revisionism Can End David Coppedge July 15, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 10 The centennial of the Scopes Trial is a good time to set the record straight. Here’s a way to turn the tables on the stereotype. Read More ›