The Latest

For Complex Life, Just Add Fertilizer

January 23, 2026
8

Be Prepared: Here Are Neanderthal Toolkits

January 23, 2026
3

How to Save Iran 1-2-3

January 16, 2026
7

Homeless Family’s Outrageous Situation Suggests Unique Remedy

January 15, 2026
5

Incentives Are Wrong in Education

January 12, 2026
4

More of the Latest …

Competition Coming for the SAT, ACT, AP, and International Baccalaureate

For far too long, K-12 education has been dominated by monopolies — the public education system, state standardized testing, the SAT and ACT college entrance exams, Advanced Placement, and the International Baccalaureate program. The result has been soaring educational costs, declining quality, and a lack of innovation, all to the detriment of students nationwide.

Video

Why Utilities Cost More: Oregon’s Net Zero

Center on Wealth & Poverty
January 8, 2026

Hezekiah and the Assyrian Invasion of Judah: The Archaeological Evidence

Stephen C. Meyer
December 12, 2025

The Origin of Animal Body Plans

Stephen C. Meyer
December 2, 2025

Why Humans Can’t Be Replicated by AI

George Montañez
November 25, 2025

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Podcast

How to Navigate the Real and Immediate Risks of AI

Robert J. Marks II
January 22, 2026
While the risk of AI becoming smarter than humans and taking over the world is often discussed, it can also distract us from a more pressing matter: the real-world, right-now risks of AI. On this episode of Mind Matters News, host Robert J. Marks continues his six-part conversation with Dr. Donald Wunsch about his expert insight into AI. In this segment, Dr. Wunsch discusses some of the real-world risks of AI, including AI-enabled cyber attacks, phishing attacks, cybersecurity, and the potential harms caused by AI’s reinforcement learning algorithms, where AI systems give people more of what they seem to want, even if it’s unhealthy or dangerous. Dr. Wunsch argues that these problems need to be tackled by policymakers, scientists, engineers, and experts from various

Why Intelligence is Necessary to Explain Nature’s Functional Information

William A. Dembski
January 21, 2026
We already have a well-established law that shows us how order can decrease in a physical system. But is there a law that explains an increase in order? Scientists have been looking for “nature’s missing law” for a while, and while they might be asking the right questions, their training in a bottom-up reductionist framework is leading them to the wrong answers. On this ID The Future, mathematician and philosopher Dr. William Dembski continues a four-part conversation with host Andrew McDiarmid about his work on the law of conservation of information and its implications for theories that attempt to explain the origin of life and the universe. In this segment of the discussion, Dembski characterizes the law of conservation of information not as a positive law that

Bill Dembski Reveals the Hidden Cost of Information

William A. Dembski
January 19, 2026
Chances are you’re already familiar with specified complexity, one of the mathematical pillars of the theory of intelligent design. There’s another pillar that is much less well known but equally vital: the law of conservation of information. On this ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid begins a four-part conversation with mathematician and philosopher Dr. William Dembski. The conversation unpacks Dembski’s work on the law of conservation of information and its implications for scientific theories like Darwinian evolution. In Part 1, Dr. Dembski begins by defining information fundamentally as the narrowing of possibilities, where specifying one outcome excludes others. Using his a simple analogy of location, he explains that identifying a specific place, like the town of

Events

Date
Jan282026
January
01
Jan
28
28
2026

Dr. Michael Egnor to Speak at Cornell University on “The Immortal Mind”

The Center for Science and Culture
Date
Jan282026
January
01
Jan
28
28
2026
Cornell University, Myron Taylor Hall
Ithaca, NY
Dr. Michael Egnor, CSC Senior Fellow and Professor of Neurosurgery and Pediatrics at Stony Brook University, will speak at Cornell University on the premise of his new book, The Immortal Mind: A Neurosurgeon’s Case for the Existence of the Soul. This event is sponsored by the Heterodox Academy Campus Community at Cornell University and Chesterton House and is both free and open to the public. To RSVP or to learn more, visit the Cornell events page. A message from the organizers: Although classical philosophers and theologians affirmed the existence and immortality of the human soul, modern neuroscientists generally deny that the soul exists or that it is a proper object for scientific study. The scientific evidence, however, suggests that the soul does exist and that
Date
Jun22282026
June
06
Jun
22
22
2026

Seminar on Intelligent Design in the Natural Sciences

The Center for Science and Culture
Date
Jun22282026
June
06
Jun
22
22
2026
Colorado
Colorado
The CSC Seminar on Intelligent Design in the Natural Sciences will prepare participants to make research contributions advancing the growing science of intelligent design (ID). The seminar will explore cutting-edge ID work in fields such as molecular biology, biochemistry, embryology, developmental biology, paleontology, computational biology, ID-theoretic mathematics, cosmology, physics, and the history and philosophy of science. The seminar will include presentations on the application of intelligent design to laboratory research as well as frank treatment of the academic realities that ID researchers confront in graduate school and beyond, and strategies for dealing with them. Although the primary focus of the seminar is science, there also will be discussion on worldview
Date
Jun22282026
June
06
Jun
22
22
2026

C.S. Lewis Fellows Program on Science and Society

The Center for Science and Culture
Date
Jun22282026
June
06
Jun
22
22
2026
Colorado
Colorado
The C.S. Lewis Fellows Program on Science and Society will explore the growing impact of science on politics, economics, social policy, bioethics, theology, and the arts during the past century. The program is named after celebrated British writer C.S. Lewis, a perceptive critic of both scientism and technocracy in books such as The Abolition of Man and That Hideous Strength. Topics to be addressed include the history of science, the relationship between faith and science, the rise of scientific materialism, the debate over Darwinian theory and intelligent design, evolutionary conceptions of ethics, science and economics, science and criminal justice, stem cell research and abortion, eugenics, family life and sexuality, ecology and animal rights, climate

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Programs