The Cell’s Design, by Fazale Rana

The Cell’s Design: How Chemistry Reveals the Creator’s Artistry
by Fazale Rana
Paper, 336 Pages

Read the Table of Contents & Chapter 10 (PDF) | More about The Cell’s Design

“In Darwin’s day, a living cell was thought to be quite simply—for all practical purposes—little more than a microscopic blob of gelatin. Rana lays out what contemporary science has learned about the cell’s design, and he poignantly and provocatively shows that it is the handiwork of not only an Intelligent Designer but specifically the God revealed in Scripture.”
- Hank Hanegraaff, president, Christian Research Institute; host, Bible Answer Man broadcast

“Fazale Rana’s welcome sequel to Origins of Life makes a significant contribution to the growing scientific literature pointing to intelligent design.”
- Kenneth Boa, president, Reflections Ministries

Do Science And The Bible Conflict?

The following books are recommended in Do Science And The Bible Conflict?, a small group curriculum published by Willow Creek Resources.

Darwin’s Black Box, by Michael J. Behe

I’m Glad You Asked, by Ken Boa and Larry Moody

Letters from a Skeptic, by Gregory Boyd and Edward Boyd

Intelligent Design, by William Dembski and Michael Behe

Evolution, by Michael Denton

Why Believe?, by C. Stephen Evans

Darwin On Trial, by Phillip E. Johnson

Give Me an Answer, by Cliffe Knechtle

Finding Faith, by Andrew Knowles

Handbook of Christian Apologetics, Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli

Mere Christianity, by C.S. Lewis

Miracles, by C.S. Lewis

Know What You Believe, by Paul Little

Know Why You Believe, by Paul Little

Scaling The Secular City, by J.P. Moreland

The Creator and the Cosmos
, by Hugh Ross

The Case for Christ, by Lee Strobel

The Case for Faith, by Lee Strobel

Why the Conflict…Science and the Bible?

The study Why: 40 Days Pursuing Answers To Life’s Biggest Questions recommends the following books for answering the question, “Why the Conflict…Science and the Bible?”

Darwin’s Black Box, by Michael Behe

Mere Creation: Science, Faith & Intelligent Design, edited by William Dembski

Uncommon Dissent, by William Dembski

Intelligent Design, by William Dembski

Evolution: A Theory In Crisis
, by Michael Denton

Darwin on Trial, by Phillip e. Johnson

The Creation Hypothesis, by J.P. Moreland

Three Views On Creation And Evolution, by J.P. Moreland and John Mark Reynolds

Do Science and the Bible Conflict? Tough Questions
, by Garry Poole

Redeeming Darwin: Discovering & Declaring the Designer

Probe Ministries has published an excellent DVD based study on Intelligent Design called Redeeming Darwin: Discovering & Declaring a Designer. The study guide that goes with it lists the following recommended books and videos:

Recommended Resources

Books

Bohlin, Ray, ed., Creation, Evolution and Modern Science. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Kregel Publications, 2000.

O’Leary, Denyse, By Design or by Chance? Minneapolis, Minnesota: Augsburg Press, 2004.

Pearcey, Nancy, Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural Captivity, Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 2004.

Strobel, Lee, The Case For A Creator. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2004.

Wells, Jonathan, The Politically Incorrect Guide to Darwinism and Intelligent Design, Washington DC: Regnery, 2006.

Woodward, Thomas, Doubts about Darwin: A History of Intelligent Design, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 2003.

Woodward, Thomas, Darwin Strikes Back: Defending the Science of Intelligent Design, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 2006

Videos

Unlocking the Mystery of Life: The Scientific case for Intelligent Design

The Privileged Planet: The Search for Purpose in the Universe

The Case For A Creator

William Dembski on World Magazine Top-100 Book List

The following is part of an article taken from the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary website:

Dembski books make Top-100 list in World magazine
by Benjamin Hawkins

Two books edited by William Dembski, research professor in philosophy at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, were featured among World Magazine Editor Marvin Olasky’s 100 favorite books from the past seven years. Dembski’s two books, Signs of Intelligence (Baker, 2001) and Uncommon Dissent: Intellectuals Who Find Darwinism Unconvincing (ISI Books, 2004), were listed along with a profile picture of Dembski in the June 30/July 7, 2007, edition of World magazine.

In comments interspersed within his list, Olasky wrote that the essays collected in Signs of Intelligence “illuminate the logical and evidential fallacies of Darwinism.” He added that Uncommon Dissent presents 15 essays that reveal the “academic firepower” of the Intelligent Design movement.

“Certainly I feel gratified and honored, especially because I have an enormous respect for Marvin Olasky,” Dembski said, referring to the appearance of the books in World magazine’s list. He added that he thought the scholars he gathered to produce these books fulfilled their purpose: “Signs of Intelligence provided the first user-friendly introduction to Intelligent Design, and Uncommon Dissent demonstrated convincingly that Darwinian evolution is ready for the scrapheap of history.”

“Truth is always fundamental, not supplemental, to the Church, and it doesn’t matter what that truth is about,” Dembski added. “When truth gets distorted, people believe lies and fall away from the source of all truth, namely, God. The truth about God’s work in creation, and whether blind, material forces have the power to do the creative work that typically has been ascribed to God, is vital to our culture and a stumbling block for many. I believe these two books help clear a path for a true understanding of God’s work in creation.”

In the late 1980s, proponents of Intelligent Design started attracting national attention with theories that the universe shows signs of having been designed by an intelligent being. The I.D. movement gained traction among parents, Christian educators, and in some schools and universities over the following decades. An I.D.-friendly textbook, Of Pandas and People by Percival Davis and Dean Kenyon, became the focus of the federal case Fitzmiller v Dover Area School District after 50 copies of the book were donated for use in Dover classrooms. In the case, the Dover Area School District was challenged for allowing I.D. to be presented along with evolution as an alternate theory for explaining the origins of life.

According to Dembski, a successor to that seminal textbook is scheduled to be published this fall. The book, titled The Design of Life: Discovering Signs of Intelligence in Biological Systems, was co-authored by Dembski and Jonathan Wells.

“I expect this book to have the largest impact of any of my books on Intelligent Design, helping to break the stranglehold that Darwinian thinking has over so much of the academy,” Dembski said. More information about The Design of Life can be accessed online at www.overwhelmingevidence.com.

Southwestern Seminary will feature Dembski as a speaker at a two-day conference titled “Intelligent Design in Business Practice,” Sept. 21-22 at the seminary’s Smith Center for Leadership Development. “This conference brings together scholars and business leaders to discuss the implications of intelligent design for business practice,” Dembski said. “In particular, this conference will explore how design principles shape the beliefs of leaders about the people they lead, the nexus of innovation, the incentives to entrepreneurship, and the methods for managing organizational change.”

The conference is open to anyone interested in how I.D. assumptions impact the business community through theories of management, leadership and organization. Other speakers scheduled to appear include Richard Martinez and Mitchell Neubert. Information about costs and registering for the conference can be located online at www.swbts.edu/intelligentdesign.

Christian Faith, Knowledge, and Science textbooks

The following are textbooks used by William Dembski in his PhD seminar on Christian Faith, Knowledge, and Science taught at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary during the Fall 2006 semester.

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Beginner’s Guide to Intelligent Design

I enjoy reading William Dembski’s blog, Uncommon Descent. For those of you who may not have been over there for awhile, it recently got a new face-lift so go on over and check it out. While going through their archives I noted that in response to a request from a grad student in the field of philosophy for a “philosophically educated beginner’s guide to ID” Dembski posted this impromptu reading list:

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