Author Stephen C. Meyer presents the case against theistic evolution. From the event “Theistic Evolution: A Scientific, Philosophical, and Theological Critique,” hosted by Biola University in 2018. Related Does the Panda Argument Hurt the Case for Evolution?Stephen Dilley April … » Go
Is it true that there are “no weaknesses” in evolutionary theory? All one must do is examine the technical scientific literature and inquire whether there are legitimate scientific challenges to chemical and biological evolution. This article reviews some of this literature and the … » Go
The stunning revelation that a segment of the intelligence community believes that North Korea already has a nuclear weapon compact enough to be placed upon a ballistic missile shows anew the limits of what intelligence agencies can determine as to what goes on in closed societies. What matters … » Go
The missus and I watched Sabrina last night, the 1954 award winning film with Audrey Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, written and directed by the great immigrant film-maker, Billy Wilder (Sunset Boulevard, Some Like it Hot, One, Two Three, etc.). In the film, the fabulously wealthy Larrabee family owns … » Go
“Flash Forward” is a new and interesting television drama presented on the ABC Television Network. The premise is brilliant – due to reasons still unknown, everyone in the world (except the bad guys) blackout for two minutes seventeen seconds. Planes crash, people collapse on the … » Go
Jerry A. Coyne is a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolution at The University of Chicago. In Why Evolution is True, he summarizes Darwinism — the modern theory of evolution — as follows: “Life on earth evolved gradually beginning with one primitive species — perhaps a … » Go
“Silly and misleading. Rather like Casey Luskin’s blather.” —Edward Humes, in his apparently only comments in response to this extensive review of Monkey Girl Any book with an icon of evolution on its cover — in this case, the fanciful diagram of ape-like skeletons … » Go
Original Article Mississippi consumers got some good news over the New Year weekend. Ten months after AT&T first proposed the buyout of BellSouth, the state’s primary wire-line carrier, the merger received final regulatory approval. An old and proud brand but a new and improved company, … » Go
Original Article Mississippians can be excused for some trepidation regarding AT&T’s planned takeover of BellSouth. The last telecom mega-merger involving Mississippi was the WorldCom buyout of Sprint in 1999. The regulatory denial of that deal was a prelude to the 2000-2002 bear … » Go