Conflict Myths: Galileo Galilei
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was a brilliant mathematician, astronomer and physicist. He was appointed to the chair of Mathematics at the…
Related resources for Posthumanism, technology and immortality
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was a brilliant mathematician, astronomer and physicist. He was appointed to the chair of Mathematics at the…
This extended review provides some excellent responses to arguments that Sagan used and which keep cropping up today.
One of the core arguments of Richard Dawkins’ book The God Delusion is that religious faith is irrational. “Dyed-in-the-wool…
William Lane Craig examines the Big Bang theory and the question of why anything exists.
Are we nothing more than the result of neurons firing? Brain scientist Sharon Dirckx's concise book explores the issue from a Christian…
In 'Can Science Explain everything?' John Lennox shows that science sits more comfortably within the Christian worldview than in atheism.
Are sceptics really as sceptical as they claim? In this book, Mitch Stokes calls on atheists and Christians alike to be more sceptical.
Summary from a 2016 Theos Report showing the positive correlation between 'religion' and 'well-being'.
How can we explain mankind's dueling capacities for debauchery and greatness? Pascal argued Christianity held the answer.