Dallas-Conference Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 13, 2021 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , COVID-19, Dallas, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, events, fossil record, human origins, Marcos Eberlin, pandemic, scholars, Science Uprising, scientists, Stephen Meyer, Texas, torture, William A. Dembski Torment: Mystery Scientist at the Dallas Conference — I’ll Tell You Later David Klinghoffer January 13, 2021 Faith & Science, Human Origins and Anthropology 2 You’ll just have to learn to be patient and find out when I’m ready to tell you. I think it will be worth the wait. Read More ›
mantid Type post Date October 22, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , bacteria, Darwinism, deception, drugs, Forensics, gravity, humans, Jerry Coyne, lying, Mount Rushmore, Nicholas Caputo, postmodernism, Return of the God Hypothesis, Royal Society, Stephen Meyer, torture, University of Portsmouth, Why Evolution Is True, William A. Dembski Design Filter Is Best Bet for Finding Liars Science and Culture October 22, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 Not all intelligent design is benevolent. Design can deceive. Can ID techniques filter the true from the false? Read More ›
DGA579823 Type post Date February 7, 2019 CategoriesFaith & SciencePhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Andrew McDiarmid, Galileo Galilei, heliocentrism, history, ID the Future, irrational, Michael Keas, myths, podcast, Roman Catholic, science, scientists, solar system, theologians, torture, Unbelievable Listen: Did Galileo Prove the Catholic Church’s Irrational Opposition to Science? Science and Culture February 7, 2019 Faith & Science, Physical Sciences 1 There’s plenty here for both scientists and theologians to learn — as well as anyone who thinks Galileo shows the Church was at war against science. Read More ›