God_the_Geometer Type post Author Martin Hilbert Date December 9, 2024 CategoriesFaith & ScienceHuman Origins and AnthropologyIntelligent Design Tagged , "God of the gaps", Alfred North Whitehead, Apostle Paul, Christians, Darwinian paradigm, Darwinism, earthquakes, Europe, evolution, faith and science, Greek philosophers, human soul, intelligent agents, intelligent design, john lennox, lightning, New Testament, Nobel laureates, Robert Laughlin, Roman Catholic, Zeus Natural Selection: The God that Failed Fr. Martin Hilbert, C.O. December 9, 2024 Faith & Science, Human Origins and Anthropology, Intelligent Design 7 The god-of-the-gaps objection does have some merit to it, but it does not rule out ID. The progress of science has dethroned a multitude of false gods. Read More ›
Morganucodon Type post Author Casey Luskin Date October 5, 2023 CategoriesHuman Origins and AnthropologyScience Education Tagged , Athena, Australopithecines, biological origins, butterfly, California Science Center, Cambrian Explosion, chimpanzees, Christmas, David Coppedge, Discovery Institute, education, evolution, free speech, French Revolution, Genetics (journal), Günter Bechly, human brains, human origins, Human Origins Program, Human Zoos, humans, intelligent design, Jeffrey Schwartz, John West, mammals, mosasaurs, National Museum of Natural History, Niles Eldredge, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, Racism, Richard Sternberg, Rick Potts, Sahelanthropus tchadensis, scientific racism, Smithsonian Institution, Stephen Meyer, Washington DC, Zeus Visitor’s Guide: At Nation’s Natural History Museum, Misinformation on Human Origins, and More Casey Luskin October 5, 2023 Human Origins and Anthropology, Science Education 18 Mammalian fossil exhibits at the Smithsonian claim that humans and all mammals descended from the “first mammal," perhaps Morganucodon. Read More ›
Science Uprising Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 15, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , Athena, Casey Luskin, Darwinian theory, evolution, explosions, fossil record, Günter Bechly, intelligent design, Jeffrey Schwartz, jumps, paleontology, premiere, Richard Sternberg, Science Uprising, Stephen Meyer, University of Pittsburgh, YouTube videos, Zeus New Science Uprising Episode Asks, “Just How Bad Is the Fossil Record for Darwin’s Theory?” David Klinghoffer November 15, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Paleontology 2 The fossil record is not a good match with Darwinian thinking, but it makes a strong pairing with intelligent design. Read More ›
Darwin statue Type post Author Neil Thomas Date September 13, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , Alfred Russel Wallace, animism, Charles Darwin, Enlightenment, evolution, Hesiod, James Le Fanu, Mary Midgley, materialistic science, natural selection, natural theology, Neo-Darwinism, Odysseus, On the Origin of Species, philosophers, Richard Dawkins, Richard Spilsbury, Samuel Wilberforce, selfish genes, Zeus The Miracle Worker: How Darwinism Dishonors the Enlightenment Neil Thomas September 13, 2021 Evolution, Faith & Science 10 If the reigning materialist paradigm had even a tolerably convincing weight of evidence behind it, I would be the first to accept it. Read More ›