Tag: evolution
“What Is a Man?” — New Book Out Today from Nancy Pearcey
Set aside one question of the moment — “What is a woman?” — and turn to another no less important problem that troubles our culture.
“Would Mathematics Be Here if We Weren’t?”
In December, physicist and author Lawrence Krauss interviewed the late American novelist Cormac McCarthy, who died on June 13th at the age of 89.
Answering Farina on Behe’s Work: The Edge of Evolution
I wonder whether Farina has in fact read Behe’s book for himself, or whether he is relying upon others, such as Nathan Lents.
Is Adaptation Actually a Fight to Stay the Same?
Charles Darwin pointed to small changes like finch beak size and peppered moth color as visible evidence of an unguided evolutionary process at work.
Answering Farina on Behe’s Work: Irreducible Complexity
The first exhibit is Lenski’s long-term evolution experiment, in which, after some 33,000 generations, bacterial cells evolved the ability to grow on citrate.