e329b07a-57f4-4d7f-b4f6-fb69fac56c2f_4032x3024 Type post Author William A. Dembski Date February 21, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & Science Tagged , American Humanist Association, C.S. Lewis, Daniel Dennett, Darwin's Dangerous Idea, debates, Denis Noble, Denyse O'Leary, Francis Collins, Francis Crick, intelligent design, James Shapiro, Mendelian genetics, Michael Egnor, Miracles (book), MIT, Old Testament, qualia, Richard Dawkins, Roger Penrose, Rudder Theatre, Santa Fe, Simon Conway Morris, Stephen Jay Gould, Steven Pinker, Steven Weinberg, Stuart Kauffman, Texas A&M University, The Better Angels of Our Nature, The Blind Watchmaker, Trotter Prize, Tufts University, violence, Zeitgeist Dawkins and Picard Win This Year’s Trotter Prize William A. Dembski February 21, 2025 Bioethics, Faith & Science 30 A reflection on the 2025 Trotter Prize Lecture delivered by Oxford's Richard Dawkins and MIT's Rosalind Picard. Read More ›
David-Berlinski-Ben-Shapiro Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 16, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyEthicsLinguisticsMathematicsPhilosophy Tagged , __edited, Ben Shapiro, climate change, coronavirus, First World War, future, Homo Deus, Human Nature (book), Incarnation, intellectuals, Ivy League, Jonathan Swift, Malcolm Muggeridge, Martin Luther King, Michael Aeschliman, Middle East, National Review, Steven Pinker, Sunday Special, T.S. Eliot, The Better Angels of Our Nature Michael Aeschliman in National Review — Berlinski Detonates “Fatuous, Flattering” Optimism David Klinghoffer February 16, 2020 Bioethics, Biology, Ethics, Linguistics, Mathematics, Philosophy 4 From climate change to the coronavirus, one tendency among writers and commentators is to an urgent, insatiable, almost sexual desire to cast unwarranted terror over other people. Read More ›