Statue_of_Charles_Darwin_Natural_History_Museum_London_2020_02 Type post Author Neil Thomas Date July 3, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceHistory of Science Tagged , Anaximander, Asa Gray, Bible, California, Charles Darwin, Council of Nicaea, Erasmus Darwin, evolution, Genesis, Hamlet, Hebrew Bible, hierophany, Higher Criticism, James Moore, Journal of Researches, King James Bible, miracles, Mircea Eliade, Neal Gillespie, On the Origin of Species, poetry, prophets, Pyrrho, Robert Fitzroy, secularism, St. Paul, Tertullian, The Canon, The Voyage of the Beagle, William Paley With “Fluctuating” Convictions, Darwin Faced a Threefold Challenge Neil Thomas July 3, 2024 Evolution, Faith & Science, History of Science 19 In what follows I pose the question of how Darwin fell subject to such wide “fluctuations” in his beliefs and how he came to resolve those tensions. Read More ›
Charles Darwin Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date May 12, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , A Christmas Carol, A Voice in the Wilderness, academia, African Americans, anti-racism, atheism, BioLogos, Charles Darwin, Charles Dickens, Charles Lyell, Crustacea, evolution, evolutionary biology, Francis Collins, history, Human Zoos, John West, Joseph L. Graves Jr., Kool-Aid, Louis Agassiz, Racism, The Voyage of the Beagle, theistic evolution, Victorian England, Yale University Joseph L. Graves as the “Black Darwin”? Think Again Robert Shedinger May 12, 2023 Bioethics, Evolution 7 Darwin could never be considered the kind of anti-racist activist Graves makes him out to be. Read More ›