Yoder
1.9K posts

Yoder
@youseekyoder
Convince me it’s possible, then prove it was done. Visit me on discord - https://t.co/ab5JHu9l5x

Massie: I would have come out sooner but I had to call my opponent to concede and it took a while to find him in Tel Aviv






This is "Earthset," captured by the crew of Artemis II





I once talked with a colleague at a black hole conference whose brother challenged her on Darwinian evolution. In her argument with him, she was startled to realize she couldn't explain why she believed it – she just did. Another colleague, astrophysicist Martin Gaskell, was the top candidate for an observatory director job. Internal emails later showed he was passed over because of his scientific skepticism toward Darwinism – his doubt wasn't faith-driven, just evidence-based. He lost a job in *astronomy* because of scientific skepticism of Darwinian evolution. As a grad student (before I was Christian), I asked a biology peer why his research – which challenged a core tenet of Darwinism – wasn't better known. Why wasn't it in the mainstream science news? I will never forget his reply: "Because it would hand a victory to the Christians." These stories highlight what Stephen Meyer observes: for many, Darwinian evolution has become a de facto religious creed. It's more about affirming worldview fidelity than dispassionate science. When questioning a theory is treated as heresy, it's dogma, not the "question everything" spirit of genuine scientific inquiry. Note: This is not an invitation to squabble with me about Darwinism. I'm still studying the evidence and haven't settled on a firm view. But Meyer is right: treating it as unquestionable turns science into a secular religion.







if this is her after 10 days i cant even imagine what it must have felt to get used to gravity again after 328 days on the iss














