First Links - 09.15.11

Global Warming, Evolution, and Presidential Politics: The Long Shadow of Galileo Public Discourse , William Carroll On Graceful Writing Evangel , Gene Fant The U.K.’s Conservative Government Defends Abortion Time , Jay Newton-Small SAT Scores Fall As Most Test Takers Miss College Benchmark . . . . Continue Reading »

The Enduring Significance of Francis Schaeffer

Until the New Yorker identified him as the intellectual force behind the coming Christian theocracy, few people outside of evangelicalism had heard of the late Francis Schaeffer. Owen Strachen explains why, twenty-seven years after his death, the “missionary to the intellectuals” is . . . . Continue Reading »

Why I’m Not For Romney Yet

In order to be environmentally conscious, this post most is mostly recycled from a comment I made over at No Left Turns: I’m not a Romney supporter because I think that even the “modest” kinds of entitlement reforms I favor really do represent big change and enacting even diluted . . . . Continue Reading »

Evolution and Human Specialness

John Farrel has written a piece for Forbes in which he cites the University of Chicago biologist Jerry Coyne : “I’ve always maintained that this piece of the Old Testament, which is easily falsified by modern genetics (modern humans descended from a group of no fewer than 10,000 . . . . Continue Reading »

Recent Events at FT

To our readers: First Things is introducing a new section of our website entitled “Recent Events” , in which we recap various signature events sponsored by the magazine. This section will also feature high-quality photography of the events, in the hope that readers who cannot make it to . . . . Continue Reading »

The Curious Case of Robert Gundry

Ivan Karamazov worried that if God is dead then all things are permissible. Likewise, so evangelicals have been told, if there is no magisterial authority, then all biblical interpretations are permissible. But even if this is not the case, we could still argue that “biblicism” results . . . . Continue Reading »

Dinner with the Dictator

Members of the Columbia University International Relations Council are  reportedly set to dine  with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he blusters into New York next week as part of his attendance at the United Nations General Assembly. As of now, it’s unclear when or where . . . . Continue Reading »