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by William A. Dembski & Johnathan Witt
Paperback
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 93%
In 1859, Charles Darwin introduced his theory of
evolution to argue that blind nature had produced all the
species of plants and animals around us. The theory
convinced a lot of people that evidence of a Creator could
not be found in nature. If some things remained mysterious,
scientists would figure them out in time -- to attribute
their origins to God, they insisted, was simply to give up
on the enterprise of science. Today, Darwinists level the
same charge against the contemporary theory of Intelligent
Design (ID). They insist that ID is just an argument from
ignorance -- plugging God into the gaps of our current
scientific understanding. "Darwinists have made many
thoughtful arguments over the years," write William Dembski
and Jonathan Witt, "but this isn’t one of them. Now, in
Intelligent Design Uncensored: An Easy-to-Understand Guide
to the Controversy, Dembski and Witt -- both leading
figures in the ID movement -- plainly lay out just what
intelligent design is, and is not, and why efforts to
silence its proponents are doomed to fail. read more |
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by David Shenk
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 96%
Is true greatness obtainable from everyday means and everyday genes? Conventional
wisdom says no; that some people -- Mozart, Einstein, Picasso, Michael Jordan -- are simply
born with certain gifts while others are not; that talent and high intelligence are scarce gems,
scattered throughout the human gene pool; that the best we can do is locate and polish these
gems -- and accept our own limitations. But as it turns out, writes David Shenk, the whole
concept of genetic giftedness turns out to be wildly off the mark -- and in The Genius in All of
Us: Why Everything You've Been Told About Genetics, Talent, and IQ Is Wrong, Shenk shows
how, in recent years, a mountain of scientific evidence has emerged that overwhelmingly
suggests a completely different paradigm: not talent scarcity, but latent talent abundance. The
problem, he reveals, isn't our inadequate genetic assets, but our inability, so far, to tap into what
we already have.
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by Sarah Palin
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 97%
In September 2008, Alaska Governor and vice presidential
nominee Sarah Palin delivered a speech at the Republican
National Convention that electrified the GOP's conservative
base. But as the campaign unfolded, Palin became a
lightning rod for criticism. Democrats, forgetting
feminism, mocked her as an empty-headed beauty queen and
bad mother, while some GOP insiders leaked complaints to
the press that she was "going rogue" as an outspoken
conservative. Now, in her eagerly anticipated memoir, Going
Rogue, Sarah Palin tells her side of the story -- about her
life, her family, her principles, her career, her vice-
presidential candidacy. . . and her possible political future. read more |
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by Lynne Cheney
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 94%
When 1787 began, our young country was in turmoil. The
central government was unable to pay off debts, there was
armed insurrection in Massachusetts, and foreign
governments were taking advantage of our weakness. The
question of the hour, James Madison wrote, was "whether the
American experiment was to be a blessing to the world or to
blast forever the hopes which the republican cause had
inspired." So in May of that year, delegates from across
America -- including George Washington, James Madison, and
Benjamin Franklin -- gathered in Philadelphia. There they
debated and struggled until finally they created a new
framework for governing: the Constitution of the United
States. Now, in We the People: The Story of Our
Constitution, bestselling author Lynne Cheney (wife of the
Vice President) and master illustrator Greg Harlin team up
to recreate this momentous time in American history -- a
time when, in Mrs. Cheney's words, "a document was written
that created our nation and offered a vision of ordered
liberty to all the world."
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