¿Quién es la persona de mayor relevancia?

Apologética, Cristianismo, Español, Frank Turek, Historia, Jesucristo, Jesus, Jesús de Nazaret
¿Por qué nos interesan tanto los asesinatos?  Algunos de los podcasts, vídeos y titulares de noticias más populares tratan sobre homicidios de alto perfil.  A menudo nos consume el principal sospechoso al que la policía suele llamar “persona de interés”.  ¿Ahora mismo, los titulares están obsesionados con Brian Laundrie?  ¿Dónde está?  ¿Lo hizo él?  Si es así, ¿por qué?  ¿Y se le hará justicia? Desgraciadamente, a la larga, la persona de interés suele ser recordada mucho más que sus víctimas. Recordamos nombres como Charles Manson, Jeffery Dahmer y Ted Bundy, pero solemos olvidar a los que mataron. Pero ¿y si hay una gran excepción a ese resultado típico?  ¿Y si el nombre más recordado e influyente de la historia de la humanidad no es un villano, sino una víctima de…
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A New Flaw in the Miller-Urey Experiment, and a Few Old Ones

atmosphere, biology, biology textbooks, early Earth, Eric Anderson, Evolution, experiments, glassware, Harold Urey, ID The Future, Intelligent Design, Jonathan Wells, Miller-Urey experiment, origin of life, Podcast, Stanley Miller, textbooks, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, University of Chicago
It is an interesting finding, but as Wells explains, it is far from the first problem discovered with the experiment, nor the most serious one. Source
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The Underlying Principle Behind the Second Law 

American Journal of Physics, atoms, automobiles, BIO-Complexity, Biological Information: New Perspectives, civilization, coins, computers, duplication errors, earth, Events, Evolution, Intelligent Design, materialists, mathematics, natural forces, open system, origin of life, physics, Physics Essays, Physics, Earth & Space, rubble, Second Law of Thermodynamics, self-replicator, sun, The Numerical Solution of Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations, tornado, William Dembski
Extremely improbable events must be macroscopically (simply) describable to be forbidden. Source
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Bacterial Flagellum Demonstrates the Explanatory and Predictive Power of Engineering Models

bacterial flagellum, BIO-Complexity, biology, components, Conference on Engineering in Living Systems, constraints, Dean Schulz, design logic, Engineering, engineering model, engineering-based models, Evolution, genetic network, hook, Intelligent Design, interrelationships, manufacturing, navigation, propeller, propulsion system, proteins, requirements, transport gate
Dean Schulz investigated the design of the flagellum with a method that could be described as groundbreaking. Source
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Artless Similarities: More Evidence for Gospel Reliability

4. Is the NT True?, Apologetics, Artless Similarities, Christianity, Erik Manning, Evidence for the Gospels, IsJesusAlive, theology
By Erik Manning While reading the gospels, you’ll notice similarities between the characters portrayed across the different stories. Parallels between the gospels concerning character depictions are unlikely to be the result of mere chance. And these correspondences seem so casual and subtle that it’s unlikely they were designed that way. Philosopher Tim McGrew calls these ‘artless similarities.’ In an earlier video, we saw this kind of unity of character with Jesus between John and the Synoptics. But let me give another example with two somewhat lesser-known characters in the gospels — Mary and Martha. We find their stories in both Luke and John. For this evidence, I’m drawing from Peter J. Williams’ excellent book Can We Trust the Gospels? [embedded content] Mary And Martha in Luke As we read Luke 10 and John…
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Happy New Year! #1 Story of 2021: Cambrian Explosion Goes Nuclear

arthropods, biology, Cambrian biota, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Charles Darwin, David Gelernter, Dickinsonia, Ediacaran organisms, Edicaran animals, Evolution, Evolution News, evolutionists, first appearance date, fungus, glide symmetry, Gregory Retallack, Ilya Bobrovskiy, Intelligent Design, latest appearance date, Mongolia, Nama Basin, Namibia, Neo-Darwinism, Peaceful Science, Science (journal), Stephen Meyer, University of Zurich, Vendobionta, Yale University
Here are two very interesting updates to my recent articles on alleged Ediacaran animals and the Cambrian Explosion. Source
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Por qué la gente odia ser juzgada

Al Serrato, Apologética, Cristianismo, Cristianos, Es bíblico juzgar, Español, Juzgar, Juzgar a otros, La Biblia y el juzgar a otros, Teología
Por Al Serrato “No me juzgues” parece ser un refrán cada vez más pronunciado, y aceptado, en nuestra sociedad, que refleja lo que parece ser una tendencia humana universal y profundamente arraigada. Incluso los cristianos, que deberían saberlo mejor, parecen subirse al tren, creyendo de algún modo que la compasión cristiana nos obliga a ser más comprensivos y aceptar el mal comportamiento. Pero si se piensa en ello, la frase no es del todo acertada. La mayoría de la gente no quiere decir realmente que no quiera ser juzgada. De hecho, lo hacen. Lo que quieren decir es que quieren que los demás aprueben su conducta o comportamiento. Lo que no quieren es que se les juzgue y se les considere deficientes. Ya sea en los deportes, en los estudios…
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#3 Story of 2021: In Mainstream Journal, ID Theorists on “Waiting Time” Problem for Coordinated Mutations

Ann Gauger, arthropods, Avalon explosion, binding sites, Cambrian Explosion, Discovery Institute, DNA, Evolution, fossil record, Günter Bechly, ID 3.0 research project, Intelligent Design, Journal of Theoretical Biology, marbles, mutations, nucleotides, Ola Hössjer, peer-reviewed literature, polynomial, regulatory regions, Springer, Stochastic Processes and Applications, tetrapods, vascular plants, waiting-time problem
The paper is authored by three key scientists in the intelligent design (ID) research program: Ola Hössjer, Günter Bechly, Ann Gauger. Source
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