
Jonathan Witt, Ph.D., is a senior fellow with Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture and co-author
A Meaningful World: How the Arts and Sciences Reveal the Genius of Nature (2006) and
Traipsing into Evolution: Intelligent Design and the Kitzmiller vs. Dover Decision(2006). He has written on aesthetics for
Literature and Theology and
The Princeton Theological Review, and currently he is exploring how Darwinists employ widely discredited and even contradictory aesthetic presuppositions in their arguments against a creator. An article on this subject, "The God's Must Be Tidy," appeared in a July/August 2004 issue of
Touchstone and was nominated by its editors as Best Theological or Scholarly Article for The Associated Church Press Awards.
His essays on Darwinism and intelligent design have appeared in such places as
The Seattle Times, The Kansas City Star, and
Philosophia Christi. His narrative writing has appeared in the journals
Windhover and
New Texas. He blogs Darwinism, design and culture with his wife, Amanda Witt, Ph.D., at
Wittinghshire (http://wittingshire.blogspot.com/); media coverage of the evolution controversy at
Evolution News & Views (http://www.evolutionnews.org); and intelligent design at
ID The Future (http://www.idthefuture.com).