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Intelligent Design the Future

The ID The Future (IDTF) podcast carries on Discovery Institute's mission of exploring the issu

Episodes

Total: 279

How often do we get to have a respectful conversation with someone who disagrees with us? On this ID

Rolex is well-known the world over for crafting high-quality, innovative time-pieces. But did you kn

Dr. Stuart Burgess has been studying the arrangement, design, and shape of vertebrate limbs and join

Dr. Jonathan Wells was a true giant of the intelligent design research community. As we mourn his re

f the sun didn't power the photosynthesis of green plants, we wouldn't be breathing right now. And w

In his book Darwin’s Black Box, biochemist Michael Behe writes that in order to understand the barri

We were saddened to learn of the recent passing of Dr. Jonathan Wells, a true giant of the intellige

The culture of death wrongly interprets the term compassion to mean “to get rid of” rather than its

On this episode, we’re pleased to share a recent conversation between astronomer Dr. Guillermo Gonza

On this episode of ID the Future out of the vault, we bring you the last of three short interviews w

On this episode of ID The Future, we’re bringing you the concluding half of a 2019 interview between

On this ID The Future, we bring you the first half of Daily Wire host Ben Shapiro’s 2019 inter

On this episode of ID the Future from the vault, we bring you the second of three short interviews w

Many of us have enjoyed a colorful twilight or a stunning sunset. But how often do we think about th

On this episode of ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid reads an exclusive excerpt from the newly re

On this episode of ID the Future from the vault, we bring you the first of three short interviews wi

In 2004, Dr. Jay Richards and Dr. Guillermo Gonzalez published a bold hypothesis: not only is Planet

In 2004, Dr. Jay Richards and Dr. Guillermo Gonzalez published a bold hypothesis: not only is Planet

On this ID the Future episode out of the vault, science historian Michael Flannery concludes his con

In 1936, Albert Einstein wrote that "the fact that [the world] is comprehensible is a miracle." But