Tag: On the Origin of Species
Flannery: A Farewell to Gertrude Himmelfarb, Pioneering Darwin Critic
Gutsy, bold, and precise in her scholarship, she saw Darwin’s theory as offering convenient “scientific” support for class-divided, untrammeled survival-of-the-fittest industrial competition.
How Science Lost Its Mind
Before Darwin, nearly everyone, in every corner of the world, believed in some type of ‘‘intelligent design,” and the majority still do.
Douglas Axe: On the 160th Anniversary of Darwin’s Origin, “Fear of Man,” the Cringe Factor, and More
I love how Dr. Axe, the Maxwell Professor of Molecular Biology at Biola, pulls no punches.
Phillip Johnson and the Rebellion of the Evidence
When Phil started talking, his diminutive stature and drab appearance melted away, replaced by a series of powerful arguments sharpened with irony and deadly accurate humor.
To Solve a (Cambrian) Problem: Declare It Solved!
Frustrated by abrupt appearance, some evolutionists are simply declaring that there is no problem with the Cambrian explosion.