Meyer-Rogan Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date July 12, 2025 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Charles Darwin, code, creative power, Darwin’s Doubt, evolution, evolutionary processes, ID the Future, intelligent design, Joe Rogan, mutation/selection mechanism, nano-machines, neo-Darwinian theory, podcast, Stephen Meyer, transcriptional hierarchies, variations “Do You Believe in Evolution?” A Question for Stephen Meyer Andrew McDiarmid July 12, 2025 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 That’s a good question that could start a very productive conversation about the origin and development of life on Earth. Read More ›
Samuel_Wilberforce_1805-George-Richmond Type post Author Rt. Revd. Samuel Wilberforce Date April 7, 2025 CategoriesBotanyEvolutionHistory of ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , algae, animals, cats, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, descendants, Dogs, elephants, England, flies, grasses, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Joseph Hooker, Lucretius, mites, mosses, mushrooms, natural history, natural selection, On the Origin of Species, propositions, Quarterly Review, reasoning, Thomas Henry Huxley, variations, whales, worms “Into the Jungle of Fanciful Assumption”: Excerpts from Samuel Wilberforce on Darwin Rt. Revd. Samuel Wilberforce April 7, 2025 Botany, Evolution, History of Science, Intelligent Design 27 "We have objected to the views with which we have been dealing solely on scientific grounds." Read More ›
Charles_Darwin_by_Julia_Margaret_Cameron,_c._1868 Type post Author Richard Weikart Date December 12, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Asa Gray, cats, Charles Lyell, Darwin Mythology, deism, designer, history, mice, Michael Ruse, natural selection, On the Origin of Species, variations Is It a Myth That Darwin Rejected Design? Richard Weikart December 12, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Deism is the idea that God created the cosmos and its natural laws, but thereafter did not intervene with miraculous events. Read More ›
pine trees in snow Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date April 18, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEnvironment & ClimateEvolutionIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , "survival of the fittest", cattle, Charles Darwin, crustaceans, Dogs, evolution, evolutionary theory, fish, Herbert Spencer, horses, intelligent design, James Tour, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Jonathan Wells, mollusks, natural selection, organisms, oxygen, oxymoron, puppies, purpose, science of purpose, selection, sheep, speciation, Stephen Meyer, variations, water A New Look at Natural Selection Stephen J. Iacoboni April 18, 2023 Biology, Environment & Climate, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 5 If you are a pine tree, you need to have antifreeze in your needles if you are rooted beyond certain latitudes or elevations. Read More ›
fruit fly Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date February 16, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionLife Sciences Tagged , central dogma, Darwinism, DNA, evolution, François Jacob, fruit flies, Jacques Monod, molecular biologists, mutations, natural selection, Nobel Prize, RNA, roundworm, Top Scientific Problems with Evolution (series), variations, Watson and Crick, zebrafish Top Scientific Problems with Evolution: Mutation Jonathan Wells February 16, 2022 Evolution, Life Sciences 5 According to evolutionary biologist Thomas Cavalier-Smith, the idea that DNA contains all the information needed to make an organism “is simply false.” Read More ›