Casey Luskin: Theistic Evolution and the Limits of Neo-Darwinism

behaviors, biological complexity, body plans, Casey Luskin, characters, Evolution, evolutionary mechanisms, Faith & Science, faith and science, ID The Future, Jacob Vasquez, life, natural selection, neo-Darwinian model, origin of life, Podcast, random mutation, Royal Society, Stephen Meyer, theistic evolution, Theistic Evolution (book), Truthful Hope
Casey Luskin addresses the inadequacy of natural selection and random mutation to generate biological complexity. Source
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For Good or Evil: The Contradictory Legacy of James D. Watson

Africa, animals, atheists, cellular operations, Christie’s, codes, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, digital code, DNA, double helix, Evolution, faith, Francis Crick, genes, genetic isolation, genetics, history, Human Zoos, humans beings, information, intelligence, Intelligent Design, intelligent designer, James D. Watson, John West, language, Maurice Wilkins, nihilism, Nobel Prize, Plato's Revenge, Race, Racism, religion, Richard Dawkins, Richard Sternberg, sequence hypothesis, Signature in the Cell, Stephen Meyer, The Information Enigma, theism
Let’s hope that whoever writes the future history of science will, like the bidder for that Nobel medal, be merciful to him. Source
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Robert Marks Remembers ID and Tech Pioneer Walter Bradley

Baylor University, car mats, Charles Thaxton, chemical evolution, coconuts, Colorado School of Mines, Dignity Coconuts, Discovery Institute, Douglas Axe, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Jay Richards, materials, mosquitoes, origin of life, Philippines, Robert J. Marks II, Roger Olsen, Stephen Meyer, Technology, Texas A&M University, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Walter Bradley, weapons, William Dembski
In 1984, three scientists dared to probe the mystery of life’s origin by putting the prevailing theories of prebiotic and chemical evolution to the test. Source
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Maturing Toward God: Update from Charles Murray

adolescence, adulthood, Charles Krauthammer, Charles Murray, chess club, consciousness, Evidence, Faith & Science, faith and science, Galileo Galilei, Isaac Newton, Law of Conservation of Matter and Energy, law of free fall, mathematics, maturing, metaphor, New York Post, nothing, Parents, physics, Proof of God in 3 Minutes, second law of motion, something, soul, Stephen Meyer, The Free Press, theology, universe
Why there is something rather than nothing is the question posed in our video, "Proof of God in 3 Minutes," about the law of conservation of matter and energy. Source
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Great Science Cancellation Continues: Here’s the Latest Victim

ABC, cancel culture, carbon dioxide, Casey Luskin, Charlie Kirk, Climate, climate change, comedians, Elsevier journals, entertainment industry, Environment & Climate, Evolution, evolutionary biologists, ideological differences, ideology, Jerry Coyne, Jimmy Kimmel, journals, lawsuits, Marcel Crok, peer-reviewed articles, physicists, Plato's Revenge, predictions, Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, ratings, researchers, Richard Sternberg, Sabine Hossenfelder, Scientific Freedom, settled science, skepticism, Smithsonian Institution, Stephen Colbert, Stephen Meyer, The College Fix
In the domination of science by ideology, by the myth of “settled science,” the stakes couldn’t be more profound.  Source
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How Did the Designer Do It? 

Amazon, astronomer, beavers, biochemists, biology, chance, Easter Island, elements, Evolution, gods, helium, Herbert Spencer, Intelligent Design, iron picks, Laurence Moran, life, necessity, New York City, Norman Lockyer, Occam's Razor, On the Origin of Species, parsimony, Philosophy of Science, skyscraper, smartphones, special creation, specified complexity, Stephen Meyer, stone hammers, Stonehenge, will
It seems the debate has not progressed much in a century and a half. Clearly, these evolutionary theorists think they have an unanswerable line of attack here. Source
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“Do You Believe in Evolution?” A Question for Stephen Meyer

biology, Charles Darwin, code, creative power, Darwin's Doubt, Evolution, evolutionary processes, ID The Future, information processing systems, integrated circuits, Intelligent Design, Joe Rogan, mutation/selection mechanism, nano-machines, neo-Darwinian theory, Podcast, signaling molecules, Stephen Meyer, transcriptional hierarchies, variations
That’s a good question that could start a very productive conversation about the origin and development of life on Earth. Source
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Remembering Walter Bradley: A Trailblazer in Intelligent Design with a Legacy to Inspire

Apologetics, Baylor University, Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence, Christianity, coconuts, CRU, Dignity Coconuts, Discovery Institute, Douglas Axe, Engineering, Faith & Science, For a Greater Purpose, Gospel of John, Intelligent Design, Jay Richards, poverty, slavery, Stephen Meyer, Texas A&M University, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Walter Bradley
It is with deep reverence that I learned of the passing of my hero. Walter was a man of extraordinary intellect, boundless compassion, and unwavering faith. Source
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Behe, Meyer, and Lennox: Evidence for Design Is Growing

academia, David Berlinski, David Gelernter, Evolution, evolutionary theory, Faith & Science, faith and science, Fiesole, ID The Future, Intelligent Design, intelligent designer, intentional design, Italy, John Lennox, mathematics, Michael Behe, Peter Robinson, physical world, Podcast, science, scientific method, Stephen Meyer, Uncommon Knowledge, universe
Peter Robinson sits down with Michael Behe, John Lennox, and Stephen Meyer, three leading voices in science on the case for an intelligent designer. Source
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“Recant!” A Sternberg Story that (Almost) Got Away

bullying, bureaucracy, Cambrian Explosion, Center for Science and Culture, Emily Sandico, Evolution, Federal Government, free speech, Greece, Greek Orthodox Church, Heresy, immaterial genome, Intelligent Design, John West, National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health, National Museum of Natural History, Ottoman Empire, parishioners, Plato's Revenge, priests, Redmond, Richard Sternberg, Smithsonian Institution, Stephen Meyer, Stockholm Syndrome Christianity
The priest cited to Sternberg the experience of Greeks when they lived under harsh Turkish rule. Source
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