Edward John Eyre Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date March 20, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , abolitionist movement, Adrian Desmond, Cambridge, Charles Darwin, citations, Darwin’s Sacred Cause, Down House, England, evolution, historiography, Jamaica, James Moore, John Stuart Mill, Louis Agassiz, Racism, Sacred Cause (series), slavery, The Times (London), William Erasmus Darwin Darwin and the “Eyre Affair”: A Speculative Tale Robert Shedinger March 20, 2023 Bioethics, Evolution 8 October 7, 1865, saw a revolt break out in Jamaica in which 18 officials and militia men were killed by members of the freed black population. Read More ›
Sagenopteris_phillipsi_Natural_History_Museum_v18596_Retallack_1980 Type post Author Günter Bechly Date June 11, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , American Journal of Botany, angiosperms, Aphrodite, BBC, British Museum, China, Cretaceous Period, flowering plants, fossil record, gymnosperms, Jurassic, On the Origin of Species, paleobotanists, Patrick Herendeen, Richard Buggs, The Times (London) Darwin’s “Abominable Mystery”: Still Alive and Kicking Günter Bechly June 11, 2021 Evolution, Life Sciences 9 Darwinists had hoped that 150 years of paleontological research since Darwin would surely make this nagging problem go away. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date October 6, 2018 CategoriesPhysical SciencesPlanetology Tagged , __k-review, "poor design", agnosticism, astronaut, awe, BBC, Brian Miller, earth, education, evolution, intelligent design, materialism, Quartz, S. Joshua Swamidass, science, The Guardian, The Times (London), United Kingdom, universe The Case of Tim Peake Shows the Perils of “Awe” Sarah Chaffee October 6, 2018 Physical Sciences, Planetology 4 Astronaut Tim Peake raised British eyebrows by seeming to endorse intelligent design. Read More ›