Tom Bethell Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date March 15, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , American Museum of Natural History, Benjamin Wiker, Bruce Chapman, California, Colin Patterson, creationism, Darwin's House of Cards, Darwinism, Discovery Institute, evolution, Expelled (movie), fossil record, From Darwin to Hitler, Gareth Nelson, intelligent design, Internet, Karl Popper, Kathie Johnson, Michael Shermer, Monterey, Nazism, Pajaro Dunes, Phillip E. Johnson, punctuated equilibrium, Richard Dawkins, Richard Lewontin, Richard Weikart, Stephen Jay Gould, The American Spectator, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory, Tom Bethell, War Games, Why Darwin Matters Our Friend, Tom Bethell Jonathan Wells March 15, 2021 Evolution 7 On February 12, 2021, Tom Bethell passed away at the age of 84 after a long illness. Read More ›
Shrewsburys_most_famous_son_-_geograph.org_.uk_-_1732417 Type post Author Granville Sewell Date January 9, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionMathematics Tagged , __edited, accident, Charles Darwin, Darwinists, En Arche Foundation, evolution, homology, intelligent design, Jay Homnick, Mathematical Intelligencer, On the Origin of Species, Polish, science, The American Spectator How Science Lost Its Mind Granville Sewell January 9, 2020 Evolution, Mathematics 3 Before Darwin, nearly everyone, in every corner of the world, believed in some type of ‘‘intelligent design,” and the majority still do. Read More ›
reproduction 2 Type post Author Granville Sewell Date November 5, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysicsReproductive Science Tagged , __k-review, airplanes, Alexander Tsiaras, cars, computers, Darwinists, encyclopedia, entropy, evolution, gravity, iPhone, Irreducible Complexity, natural forces, oocyte, Physics Essays, Sarah Chaffee, Second Law of Thermodynamics, TED talk, The American Spectator, thermodynamics Why Evolution and Reproduction Are Unnatural Granville Sewell November 5, 2018 Intelligent Design, Physics, Reproductive Science 6 Reproduction is the most fundamental characteristic of life. We see it happen everywhere, so we may feel there is nothing “unnatural” about it. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date October 11, 2018 CategoriesScience Education Tagged , __k-review, Charles Darwin, debate, Discovery Institute, education, evolution, Granville Sewell, health, India, Israel, Natural History Museum, prosperity, Richard Owen, schoolchildren, science, science curricula, Science Education Policy, The American Spectator, Turkey U.K. Museum Director Calls for Venerating Evolution as “Irrefutable” Sarah Chaffee October 11, 2018 Science Education 5 The highest calling for a great museum like Dixon’s is not to be a refuge. It is to be a portal — a portal for scientific discovery. Read More ›
bored in science class Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 5, 2018 CategoriesBiologyScience Education Tagged , __k-review, academic freedom, Arizona, creationism, Discovery Institute, education, evolution, Granville Sewell, gravity, high school, hysteria, lawmakers, legislation, Louisiana Science Education Act, Neo-Darwinism, Sarah Chaffee, teachers, Tennessee, textbook, The American Spectator Chaffee, Sewell: “Evolution — More Certain Than Gravity?” David Klinghoffer August 5, 2018 Biology, Science Education 3 “Imagine two science teachers. Mr. Smith expects students simply to memorize and correctly regurgitate.” Read More ›