Homo_neanderthalensis,_The_Natural_History_Museum_Vienna,_20210730_1225_1278 Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 14, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , archaeologists, archaeology, art, Bible, Carly Cassella, cave art, caves, Darwinian paradigm, Darwinism, evolution, fire, human origins, King Tut, Neanderthals, Paul Pettitt, Rosetta Stone, Science Alert, subhumans, The Conversation, University of Durham Perhaps Neanderthals Never Truly Went Extinct Denyse O’Leary November 14, 2025 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology 5 A critical part of the original tale of the Neanderthals is that, because they were stupid, we smarter, more evolved modern humans finished them off. Read More ›
physics Type post Date October 23, 2022 CategoriesPhysical SciencesPhysicsScience Tagged , Cambridge University Press, general relativity, Nancy Cartwright, pop psychology, social psychology, Texas, University of Durham Can Physics Account for Our Whole Reality? Science and Culture October 23, 2022 Physical Sciences, Physics, Science 4 Mathematician turned philosopher Nancy Cartwright says no; reality is ultimately too complex for that. Read More ›
Taking Leave of Darwin Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date August 2, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , agnostics, British Rationalist Association, Darwinism, Darwinists, Discovery Institute Press, England, evolutionary theory, German, magical thinking, Nazis, Neil Thomas, Oxford University, propaganda, Richard Dawkins, skepticism, Taking Leave of Darwin, University of Durham In a New Book, Longtime Agnostic Dumps Darwin Jonathan Witt August 2, 2021 Evolution 3 Critics of intelligent design will have a hard time maligning Neil Thomas as a “creationist in a cheap tuxedo.” Read More ›