NASA Type post Date June 6, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Anselm of Canterbury, autism, Christianity, creator, Denyse O'Leary, faith and reason, Five Ways, Jesus Christ, Kurt Gödel, lawfulness, Matt Dillahunty, Michael Egnor, Moral Law, prayer, Robert J. Marks II, science and religion, Stephen Hawking, The Immortal Mind, Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Sowell, universe Egnor: The Architecture of Reality Science and Culture June 6, 2025 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 4 In a new podcast discussion with Robert J. Marks, Michael Egnor talks about the relationship between faith and arguments from philosophical reasoning. Read More ›
genie Type post Date July 6, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolution Tagged , bacteria, C.S. Lewis, Darwin’s genie, Darwinism, economics, Long Term Evolution Experiment, Maxwell’s demon, natural selection, On the Origin of Species, PNAS, Richard Lenski, scientism, screwdriver, The Abolition of Man, Thomas Sowell Darwin’s Genie: Misapplied Natural Selection Continues Science and Culture July 6, 2021 Biology, Evolution 9 “Natural selection” is like a Swiss Army knife that researchers in widely different disciplines use to solve their problems. Read More ›
Marvin Olasky Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 11, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, anthropology, Discovery Institute, economics, homelessness, intelligent design, Marvin Olasky, mental illness, poverty, progressive, Seattle, Thomas Sowell, tradition, virtue-signaling, World Magazine Olasky at Discovery Institute: Intelligent Design and the Anthropology of Homelessness David Klinghoffer September 11, 2018 Bioethics, Intelligent Design 2 What’s the pivot that turns us toward more traditional solutions, versus the wrongly named “progressive” ones? Read More ›