Author: David Klinghoffer
Stephen Meyer and James Tour on Isaac Newton: “Why There, Why Then?”
“Why did science arise in its modern form with its distinctive systematic methods of investigating nature in 16th- and 17th-century Europe?”
“Irreducible Complexity” in the News
In a loose sense, America may be “irreducibly complex” but NPR sure is not. And “diverse”? America is, but NPR certainly isn’t.
The Cell as an “Anarcho-Syndicalist Commune”
Dr. Navare, a science writer and an enthusiast of Feminist Science Studies, plausibly makes a scientific case against seeing the cell as a hierarchical entity.
Joe Lieberman, the Sabbath, and Intelligent Design
In simplest terms, the Biblical institution of a Sabbath is intended as a weekly reminder of intelligent design.
A Reckoning for Darwinism as “Junk DNA” Flops
As a product of care and intention, the genome ought to be comparable in a way with products of human genius, with every detail there for a reason.