The Latest

Why a Multiverse Doesn’t Refute Fine-Tuning

February 10, 2026
5

Bad Design, or Ultimate Engineering? Two Views

February 9, 2026
8

Lawsuits Delay Homeless Reforms and Leave People on the Streets

February 4, 2026
5

Woman Euthanized and Her Face Transplanted in Spain

February 4, 2026
4

Humans Create, AI Amalgamates. Here’s Why It Matters

February 2, 2026
5

More of the Latest …

New Poll Shows Most Americans Admire America’s Founding, But Reject Its Ideas

New polling released by Discovery Institute in time for Presidents Day reveals that most Americans still admire the American Founding.
“The death of American patriotism appears to have been greatly exaggerated,” says political scientist Dr. John West, author of the new report How Americans View the American Founding. “Despite a torrent of negativity in recent years about America’s Founders, most Americans still revere them.”

Video

How High-Tech in Your Cells Points to God

The Center for Science and Culture
February 2, 2026

Stopping the Sweep Didn’t Fix Anything at Seattle’s Ballard Encampment

Kevin Dahlgren
January 28, 2026

How Logic Points to God

The Center for Science and Culture
January 26, 2026

How to Build a Baby

The Center for Science and Culture
January 21, 2026

More Videos …

Podcast

The Accidental Inventor: An Interview with Hal Philipp

Robert J. Marks II
February 9, 2026
Starting this month, ID The Future listeners will get to enjoy a new episode each month (as well as a bingecast archive episode) from our sister podcast Mind Matters News, a production of the Discovery Institute’s Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence. The Mind Matters News podcast brings you interviews and insight from computer scientists, engineers, inventors, neurosurgeons, and other experts who bring sanity to the conversation about natural and artificial intelligence, going beyond the hype to explore the undercurrents of these important ideas. And although the Mind Matters News podcast will not often explicitly discuss intelligent design, it regularly explores the nature of intelligence, the origin of information, and the things that make us uniquely

Dr. Casey Luskin on the Genetic Differences Between Humans and Chimpanzees and Why They Matter

Wesley J. Smith
February 9, 2026
Chimpanzees, we are told, are the closest relatives to human beings. Indeed, for years scientists claimed that there is only about a one percent difference separating the human genome from that of chimps. Some advocates even claimed that means humans are mostly chimps, or that chimps are mostly human, eroding the principle of human exceptionalism. But research published last year disclosed that the “one percent difference” was badly off the mark and that the true genetic difference between humans and chimps is about 15%. But what does the genetic difference statistic mean scientifically, and whether one percent or fifteen, does it matter morally? Wesley invited one of Discovery Institute’s premier scholars to discuss these new findings and the meaning of it all.

How Life Leverages the Laws of Nature to Survive

Howard Glicksman
February 6, 2026
Left to their own devices, the natural result of physics and chemistry is death, not life. So how are we still breathing? On this classic ID The Future from the archive, host Eric Anderson concludes his conversation with physician Howard Glicksman about some of the remarkable engineering challenges that have to be solved to produce and maintain living organisms such as ourselves. Glicksman is co-author with systems engineer Steve Laufmann of the book Your Designed Body, an exploration of the extraordinary system of systems that encompasses thousands of ingenious and interdependent engineering solutions to keep us alive and ticking. In the “just so” stories of the Darwinian narrative, these engineering solutions simply evolved. They emerged and got conserved. Voila! But it takes more

Events

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

More Events …

Programs