0 someone who believes in or supports the theory of evolution --
1 someone who believes in or supports the theory of evolution --
Drees draws on a wealth of research from historians, cultural evolutionists, brain scientists, theologians, philosophers, and physicists to develop a comprehensive, intelligent, and above all, naturalized account of religion.
Here, he argues that it would be against the spirit of an evolutionist account of language competence not to assume that syntax contains information on linear order.
That context was marked by authority controversies between "traditional" organism-centered evolutionists, and the "new" molecular biologists interested in evolution.
Even today, such ideas are strangely attractive for biological evolutionists.
The cultural evolutionist or cultural materialist tradition gives priority in the analysis of change to events in the techno-economic sphere.
Many people, including some evolutionists, dislike these truisms, but no one has mustered an evidence-based case against them.
Semantides are said to carry information of evolutionary relationships, something that molecular evolutionists considered particularly useful for their phyletic reconstructions.
A chronological ordering not only risks becoming evolutionist, but also implies a 'completed' past, fixed in time, and in contrast with the ongoing present.