That's what happened when Darwin looked to Malthus for notions of the struggle for survival, competing for limited resources, and (in a later edition) survival of the fittest.
Something like that might be the case when Dembski looks to a melange of disciplines he places under the umbrella "design theory" (e.g., forensics, cryptology, etc. and perhaps information theory) to empower his argument for intelligent design.
Something like that might be the case when Dembski looks to a melange of disciplines he places under the umbrella "design theory" (e.g., forensics, cryptology, etc. and perhaps information theory) to empower his argument for intelligent design.
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