Brian Keating: Getting Nervous About “Follow the Science”

astrophysicists, Brian Keating, debate, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Galileo Galilei, knowledge, Michael Knowles, morality, Physics, Earth & Space, PragerU, Return of the God Hypothesis, rioting, scientists, Stephen Meyer, U.C. San Diego, wisdom
These are EXCELLENT. I would say the themes of all three have to do with the importance of not worshipping scientists or imagining that science is infallible. Source
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Meyer: “Is the Designer an Alien or God?”

alien intelligence, atheists, biological information, Brian Keating, cosmos, DNA, HarperOne, Intelligent Design, New Atheism, origin of life, panspermia, physics, Physics, Earth & Space, Return of the God Hypothesis, Richard Dawkins, scientists, The Stream, U.C. San Diego
"The fine-tuning of the universe is better explained by an intelligent agent that transcends the universe, with attributes that we associate with God." Source
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Meyer, Keating: Why Was the Object of Creation So Long in Coming? And Other Good Questions

agnostics, Big Bang, Brian Keating, cosmological models, cosmology, Creation, Human Origins, humans, Intelligent Design, Judaism, Losing the Nobel Prize, Meaning, Messiah, physicists, Physics, Earth & Space, Podcast, purpose, rationality, Return of the God Hypothesis, Stephen Meyer, U.C. San Diego, Young Earth Creationists
I listened in the car on my way to and from a funeral. Obviously, the end of life, like its beginning, is an occasion for pondering ultimate questions. Source
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“Canceled” Physicist Eric Hedin Explores the Boundaries of Science

atheists, Ball State University, Big Bang, Canceled Science, cosmic fine-tuning, eric hedin, experimental plasma physics, freedom from religion foundation, Intelligent Design, Jerry Coyne, physicists, Physics, Earth & Space, Robert Crowther, scientists, Stockholm, The Boundaries of Science, University of Washington
Robert Crowther and author Eric Hedin begin by revisiting the atheist attack on Hedin and his Ball State University course, "The Boundaries of Science." Source
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