Darwin Type post Author Daniel Witt Date June 25, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Australian Aboriginals, brain, Charles Darwin, common ancestor, compartmentalization, creationism, Darwinism, digestive system, dualism, evolution, false dilemma, hereditarianism, human lineages, humans, intelligence, intelligent design, IQ gap, J. B. S. Haldane, lungs, men, Native Americans, natural selection, Nicobar Islands, Personality and Individual Differences, Racism, random variation, retconning, savages, skin, sub-Saharan Africans, tails, women 21st-Century Darwinism’s Impossible Situation Daniel Witt June 25, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 The nasty racial implications of Darwin’s theory should not just be tastefully ignored. Read More ›
Lord-Monboddo Type post Author Daniel Witt Date June 19, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionHuman ExceptionalismHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , Africa, apes, Charles Darwin, common ancestry, East India Company, Erasmus Darwin, evolutionary theory, females, human races, humans, Java, Lord Monboddo, monkeys, orangutans, race science, racial disparities, Racism, special creation, species, speech, tails, The Descent of Man, travelers, women Monkey Men: The Fables That Inspired Evolutionary Theory Daniel Witt June 19, 2025 Evolution, Human Exceptionalism, Human Origins and Anthropology 7 “For, that there are men with tails,” wrote Lord Monboddo, “…is a fact so well attested that I think it cannot be doubted.” Read More ›