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'Darwin on Trial' by Phillip E. Johnson: 1st Edition Open Access Book + Video
Online open access/free first edition of Phillip E. Johnson's book 'Darwin on Trial' (2nd Edition: Amazon UK | US)
Video: Watch (RealPlayer) Phillip Johnson's Address given at the University of California, Irvine, 1992 (running time 90 minutes approx) in which he discusses Richard Dawkins book The Blind Watchmaker (UK | US) - see "Richard Dawkins in 'The Blind Watchmaker': 1987 BBC Horizon Online Video". Dawkins' latest book: The God Delusion (UK | US)
Sample book review: "The Mistrial of Evolution"
'Darwin on Trial' Table of Contents:
Chapter One: The Legal Setting
Chapter Two: Natural Selection: As a Tautology; As a Scientific Hypothesis; As a Deductive Argument; As a Philosophical Necessity
Chapter Three: Mutations Great and Small
Chapter Four: The Fossil Problem
Chapter Five: The Fact of Evolution
Chapter Six: The Vertebrate Sequence: Fish to Amphibians; Amphibians to Reptiles; Reptiles to Mammals; Reptile to Bird; From Apes to Humans
Chapter Seven: The Molecular Evidence
Chapter Eight: Prebiological Evolution
Chapter Nine: The Rules of Science
Chapter Ten: Darwinist Religion
Chapter Eleven: Darwinist Education
Chapter Twelve: Science and Pseudoscience Research Notes
Featured Book: "The Wedge of Truth: Splitting the Foundations of Naturalism" by Phillip E. Johnson (Amazon UK | US)
Books on Intelligent Design from the Science and Evolution Bookshop: UK | US
Books on 'Science and Religion' from the Science and Evolution Bookshop: UK | US
John Latter / Jorolat
Evolution Research:
http://evomech3.blogspot.com/
Science and Evolution Bookshop:
http://evomech5.blogspot.com/



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 02:46 on July 30th, 2009
The Justice Department estimates that 16 percent of the adult inmates in American prisons—more than 350,000 of those incarcerated—suffer from mental illness; the percentage among juveniles is even higher. And 2007 MB2-632 exam Justice statistics showed that nearly 60 percent of the state prisoners serving time for a drug offense had no history of violence and four out of five drug arrests were for drug possession, not sales. Webb also reminds us that while drug use varies little by ethnic group in the United States, African-Americans—estimated at 14 percent of regular drug users— 000-973 exam make up 56 percent of those in state prison for drug crimes. We know all of this. The question is how long we want to avoid dealing with it.