5052744416-353f737db7-o Type post Author Eric Hedin Date August 14, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , Big Bang, children, earth, electromagnetic force, family, galaxies, helium, humans, hydrogen, life, natural forces, organisms, parents, photons, planets, stars, strong nuclear force, universe, weak nuclear force What Can We Infer About the Source of Life? Eric Hedin August 14, 2024 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 6 If I may, I would submit that a familial relationship exists between the author of life and what has been made. Read More ›
Steven Weinberg Type post Author Brian Miller Date July 30, 2021 CategoriesFine-tuningPhysical Sciences Tagged , atheism, Bernard Carr, Cornell University, electromagnetic force, Harvard University, Higgs Boson, immigrants, Jews, meaning, MIT, multiverse, New York City, Nobel Prize, particle physics, physicists, Princeton University, Return of the God Hypothesis, Stephen Meyer, theoretical physics, U.C. Berkeley, weak nuclear force Farewell to Steven Weinberg, Visionary Physicist Who Appealed to the Multiverse Brian Miller July 30, 2021 Fine-tuning, Physical Sciences 3 A sad note in Weinberg’s life was that his philosophical framework prevented him from seeing the design behind the physics he studied. Read More ›
Jupiter-2048x1075 Type post Author Robert A. Alston Date May 26, 2020 CategoriesPhilosophyPhysical Sciences Tagged , A Fortunate Universe, Alexander Vilenkin, carbon, cosmic fine-tuning, cosmic microwave background radiation, Edwin Hubble, electromagnetism, existence, Fred Hoyle, Georges Lemaître, Geraint Lewis, Goldilocks, golf ball, gravity, Kalam cosmological argument, Luke Barnes, Martin Rees, ping-pong ball, quantum cosmology, strong nuclear force, universe, weak nuclear force, William Lane Craig Book Excerpt: The Big Bang and the Fine-Tuned Universe Robert A. Alston May 26, 2020 Philosophy, Physical Sciences 9 What can we infer about the cause of the universe, about what brought it into being? Read More ›
Big Bang Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 8, 2017 CategoriesFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , __k-review, Big Bang, Charles Townes, Discovering Intelligent Design, electromagnetic force, expansion rate of universe, gravitational constant, gravity, hydrogen, ID's Top Six, initial entropy, intelligent design, nature, Nobel laureate, physical constants, quantum mechanics, stars, universe, weak nuclear force, William Lane Craig ID’s Top Six — The Fine-Tuning of the Universe Casey Luskin November 8, 2017 Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Physics 5 Some scientists respond, “Well, there must be an enormous number of universes and each one is a little different. This one just happened to turn out right.” Read More ›