Discovery Institute | Page 831 | Public policy think tank advancing a culture of purpose, creativity, and innovation.

snowy-peak-of-mount-rainier-stockpack-adobe-stock-347006046-stockpack-adobestock
Snowy Peak of Mount Rainier
Image Credit: Camille Lamoureux - Adobe Stock

International region shares a common destiny

Once more a good idea is taking on a life of its own. The idea is “Cascadia,” the concept that the Pacific Northwest of the United States and the two Western provinces of Canada are in reality one international region with a common destiny. In an era that has seen large centripetal forces pulling Western Europe together into the European Read More ›

schools-out

School’s Out

A radical formula for cutting through the bureaucracy of the traditional education system proposes the implementation of technologically innovative media as learning tools and privatization of schools to introduce competitiveness. Editorial Reviews From Publishers Weekly Are school systems, classrooms and teachers obsolete? No less so than the horse was with the coming of the automobile age, argues Perelman, a senior Read More ›

stephen-c-meyer-1992-still

Darwinism: Scientific Inference or Philosophical Preference

A session from a 1992 symposium called Darwinism: Scientific Inference or Philosophical Preference, recorded by the Foundation for Thought and Ethics, featuring Michael Ruse and Stephen Meyer.

close-up-of-a-baseball-stockpack-adobe-stock-65832217-stockpack-adobestock
Close-up of a baseball
Image Credit: Jeff Lueders - Adobe Stock

Seattle Tells Nintendo: Let’s Play Ball

The hostility to the proposed purchase of the Seattle Mariners by a syndicate that includes the family that owns Nintendo is the most embarrassing moment in baseball history since the protests against the Brooklyn Dodgers’ decision to take Jackie Robinson into the major leagues. Xenophobes are muttering that the new owners will turn the team into the “Seattle Marios” and Read More ›

constitution feather
us constitution medium
Image Credit: James Steidl - Adobe Stock

Political Philosophy Of The Constitution

To speak of the political philosophy of the Constitution is to invite immediate controversy. Many allege that the Constitution has no coherent political philosophy; and those who maintain otherwise often regard its political philosophy as far from commendable. Those who contend that the Constitution is theoretically incoherent point to its various inconsistencies and the many provisions that were the products Read More ›

map-detail-globe-eastern-europe-stockpack-adobe-stock-75946526-stockpack-adobestock
map detail globe eastern Europe
Image Credit: twixx - Adobe Stock

Why it’s in U.S. interest to help former Soviet republics

For over two years we have been warned of impending chaos once the Soviet Communist regime finally collapsed. Yet only now has the Bush administration committed itself to a major aid program. Why? Much of the answer is found in domestic politics. George Bush has been a success in foreign policy, but the slumping economy has most Americans demanding more Read More ›

retro-old-tv-on-circus-vintage-wall-background-3d-illustrati-202242944-stockpack-adobestock
Retro old tv on circus vintage wall background. 3d illustration
Image Credit: Rawf8 - Adobe Stock

The People’s ‘Right’ to a Show

It’s time to sit back, put our feet up and watch the rape trial of William Kennedy Smith. Thanks to television we now can observe real crimes covered on videotape, real arrests in progress, and real trials, live. The formats also can be combined, as when the Los Angeles Police Department was caught on amateur videotape clubbing a motorist over Read More ›

aerial-view-of-a-nuclear-power-plant-with-cooling-towers-emi-854782645-stockpack-adobestock
Aerial view of a nuclear power plant with cooling towers emitting steam.
Image Credit: Александр Марченко - Adobe Stock

Nuclear Inspectors Have a Mandate but Need Money

One might expect that the United States, which led a $50-billion Gulf War and then assigned the job of nuclear weapons searches in Iraq to the United Nations, would supply its share of funds to do the job. But, while inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) are still in Iraq, the IAEA director general, Hans Blix, reports that Read More ›

random number
bingo game at a bar setting
Image Credit: Mark - Adobe Stock

Randomness by Design

Randomness entails no moral deficiency. Random number generators must be constructed with reckless abandon — though a reckless abandon that is well thought out. Randomness, properly to be randomness, must leave nothing to chance. Read More ›
darwin-on-trial-20th-anniversary

Darwin On Trial

Darwin on Trial was responsible for alerting many among the public and in the scientific community to the deficiencies of Darwinism. UC Berkeley Law Professor and Program Advisor for Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, Phillip E. Johnson applies his skills as an analyzer of evidence to ask if Darwin’s theory holds up to scrutiny. Johnson begins by recognizing Read More ›