William Dembski today published a short list of books for philosophy students wanting to investigate Intelligent Design. They are
- Ben Wiker, Moral Darwinism (IVP)
- Bill Dembski, The Design Revolution (IVP)
- Bill Dembski, No Free Lunch (Rowman & Littlefield)
- Michael Rea, World without Design (Oxford)
- William Lane Craig & JP Moreland (eds.), Naturalism: A Critical Analysis (Routledge)
- Del Ratzsch, Nature, Design, and Science (SUNY)
- Neil Manson (ed.), God and Design (Routledge)
- Thomas Reid, Lectures on Natural Theology (UPA, edited by Elmer Duncan)
Bah!
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By the way, how does ID account for Neanderthals anyway?
By the way, how does ID account for Neanderthals anyway?
I'm not even sure that ID really deals with Neanderthals. It is not a full-orbed theory of origins, it is merely a mathematical challenge to Darwinian gradualism.
Creationism, however, deals w/ Neanderthals this way – they were fully human – their differences from modern humans can be accounted for by normal variation within the modern human species and/or nutritional deficiencies. Check out Lubenow (and the evolutionist's response.)
I don't know as much about creationism as you but I do know, according to Genesis, that we started out with Adam and Eve in Eden. I don't see how Neanderthals, Homo Erectus, Etc. came from Adam and Eve.
You have to disengage your images of them from the "artists' renderings" of them – artists often make them look apelike, when in reality, they may have looked just like any of the native people we see today around the world.
If skull comparisons are accurate, their brain would certainly be shaped differently than homo sapiens sapiens.