AdeliePenguinsoniceberg Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date December 4, 2025 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , Antarctica, Arctic, Aristotle, bacterial flagellum, bats, biology, biosphere, blood-clotting cascade, blubber, cetaceans, Chance and Necessity, CHNOPS, complementarity, Darwin's Black Box, duality, emergence, Erwin Schrödinger, feathers, function, Jaques Monod, language, marine iguanas, Mass, Michael Behe, penguins, physical reality, property, science of purpose, scientism, specified irreducible complexity, structure, structure-function relationship, subject-object metaphysical framework, telos, Thomas Aquinas, Thomistic Aristotelianism How Life Becomes Comprehensible: A New Scientific Framework Stephen J. Iacoboni December 4, 2025 Biology, Intelligent Design 7 The duality of emergence and specified irreducible complexity must be discarded. In doing so, we create a framework compatible with Thomistic Aristotelianism. Read More ›
Dead Sea Scrolls Type post Author Eric Hedin Date November 21, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Antarctica, arson, carbon dioxide, Dead Sea Scrolls, design detection, intelligence, intelligent agency, magnetic field, Michael Egnor, minds, natural forces, Paul Nelson, probability, water, William A. Dembski Design: A Scientific Proxy for Intelligence Eric Hedin November 21, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 The Dead Sea Scrolls are an example of a design artifact for which intelligence is inferred as the source. Read More ›
Glyptodon Type post Author Günter Bechly Date December 16, 2022 CategoriesPaleontologyScience Tagged , Afrotheria, America, Antarctica, anteaters, Argentina, armadillos, clades, Darwinists, Early Eocene, megafauna, molecular clock, Natural History Museum of Vienna, New World, Patagonia, phylogenetic systematics, placental mammals, Pleistocene, primates, sloths, Tubulidentata, Xenarthra Fossil Friday: The Giant Armadillo Glyptodon and the Abrupt Origin of Xenarthrans Günter Bechly December 16, 2022 Paleontology, Science 20 Should we dare to consider the possibility that something is wrong with the Darwinist assumptions? Heaven forbid! Read More ›
springtail Type post Author David Coppedge Date December 5, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , abdomen, Antarctica, Arthropoda, arthropods, Collembola, Darwinism, etymology, evolution, Georgia Tech, imitation, insects, intelligent design, just-so stories, Latin, PNAS, popcorn, Science Uprising, South Korea, springtails, Stanford University Springtails: Wingless Arthropods that Can Fly David Coppedge December 5, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 The fossil record shows a “Hexapod Gap.” Unfortunately for Darwin, the two leading theories to explain the gap can be ruled out. Read More ›
Greenland Ice Sheet Type post Date December 23, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , Antarctica, calcium, cobalt, Communications Earth & Environment, Design of Life, enzymes, Flight: The Genius of Birds, Freeman Dyson, Freshwater, Geophysical Research Letters, glaciers, Greenland, ice, Illustra Media, iron, krill, magnesium, manganese, materialists, metals, Michael Denton, molybdenum, PNAS, potassium, Privileged Species, rivers, sodium, The Wonder of Water, trace elements, vitamin B12 Glaciers Enhance the Biosphere — By Design Science and Culture December 23, 2020 Intelligent Design 7 Glacial meltwater performs unexpected and surprising roles that benefit life on earth. Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date January 11, 2019 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , __k-review, animal rights, animal welfare, Antarctica, cetaceans, ivory poaching, Japan, Russia, South Korea, whales Japanese Whaling and Human Exceptionalism Wesley J. Smith January 11, 2019 Bioethics, Human Exceptionalism 3 Japan has quit the International Whaling Commission so that it can resume commercial slaughter of leviathans. Read More ›