first cell Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date April 12, 2023 CategoriesChemistryEngineeringFine-tuningIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , bacteria, Biomimetics, Brazil, cell membranes, engineers, foresight, genetic code, intelligent design, inventions, Livia Eberlin, living cell, mass spectrometry, medicines, mind, nature, oxygen, São Paulo, Thomson Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, University of Campinas Breakthroughs Unveil Evidence of Foresight in Nature Marcos Eberlin April 12, 2023 Chemistry, Engineering, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 4 From an engineering standpoint, it was essential that a way be found to protect the cell, life’s most basic unit. Read More ›
Venus flytrap 2 Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date July 12, 2019 CategoriesBotanyChemistryEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, animal kingdom, bacteria, BBC, carnivorous plants, Charles Darwin, Darwinism, devolution, digestive system, Dionaea muscipula, evolution, evolutionary pathway, foresight, homology, homoplasy, insects, Marcos Eberlin, natural selection, Nepenthes, Nobel Prize, prey, Rainer Hedrich, United States, Venus flytrap The Lovable Venus Flytrap: A Design Analysis Marcos Eberlin July 12, 2019 Botany, Chemistry, Engineering, Intelligent Design 7 A correspondent sends along this remarkable nature video from the BBC and asks a good question. Read More ›
Campylobacter jejuni bacteria Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date June 21, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , __k-review, appendix, Darwinian medicine, Darwinists, David Klinghoffer, dehydration, diarrhea, electrolytes, Escherichia coli, foresight, GUT, gut bacteria, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, mammals, Marcos Eberlin, microbes, physiology, poverty, Salmonella, The Descent of Man, toxins, vestigial structures Diarrhea and Design: A Response to Jerry Coyne Marcos Eberlin June 21, 2019 Intelligent Design, Medicine 10 I respect Coyne’s position, but, lacking his faith, I interpret this evidence more naturally as pointing to an ingenious mind. Read More ›
radio dial Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date May 28, 2019 CategoriesFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesPhysicsScientific Reasoning Tagged , __k-review, “nones”, atheism, evidence, foresight, Fred Hoyle, gravitational constant, intelligent design, materialists, naturalism, Nobel laureates, radio, science, speed of light, truth, universe The Radio at the Edge of the Universe Marcos Eberlin May 28, 2019 Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Physics, Scientific Reasoning 5 If the universe were a radio and the desired setting allows for life, it would have dozens of dials for setting the values of the universal constants. Read More ›
Shrewsbury_Library_-_School_Gardens,_Shrewsbury_-_seated_statue_of_Charles_Darwin_(25466955221) Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date May 22, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Doubt, devolution, epigenetic inheritance, evolution, fitness, foresight, fossil record, Michael Behe, Michael Lynch, molecular machines, mutations, natural genetic engineering, natural selection, Neo-Darwinism, neutral evolution, punctuated equilibrium, Royal Society, self-organization, Stephen Meyer, University of Cambridge Game of Thrones: As Darwinism Dissolves, Top Evolutionists Scramble for a Successor Marcos Eberlin May 22, 2019 Evolution 6 A meeting at Churchill College, University of Cambridge, sought to encourage novel thinking about evolution. Read More ›
Eberlin Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date May 1, 2019 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent DesignTechnology Tagged , __k-review, biomolecules, Brazil, Brazilian Academy of Sciences, cell membranes, cells, Darwinian process, evolution, foresight, Livia Eberlin, Nature (journal), oxygen, São Paulo, temperature, Thomson Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, University of Campinas Gold Rush of Discovery Points Beyond Blind Evolutionary Process — to Foresight Marcos Eberlin May 1, 2019 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Technology 7 We’re told that it’s out of bounds for science to go there. I take up that claim in the final chapter of my book, Foresight. Read More ›