PianokeysbyHansBraxmeier Type post Author Stuart Burgess Date March 9, 2026 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , art, Claude Debussy, cooking, dexterity, evolutionary process, evolutionary theory, exoskeleton, fingers, fitness, Formula 1 race car, go-kart, hand muscles, human brain, Menahem Pressler, motor cortex, motor units, muscle units, muscles, music, nerve pathways, prosthetic device, skillful moving, surgery, survival, technology, tool-making, touch, typing, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Fingers Are Fine-Tuned Far Beyond the Need for Survival Stuart Burgess March 9, 2026 Anatomy, Engineering, Intelligent Design 5 Our exoskeleton could only make simple hand grips, far short of what a healthy human hand could manage. Read More ›
MichaelLevin Type post Author William A. Dembski Date January 20, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophyPhilosophy of Science Tagged , AI Overview, archaeology, art, Bas van Fraassen, biology, ChatGPT, complex specified information, computation, computer science, Conservation of Information, control, cryptography, Darwinian theory, Discovery Institute, Ernest Nagel, experiment, fecundity, Forensics, function, gnana yoga, Grok, Hinduism, ID 3.0 Research Program, Imre Lakatos, information, intelligent design, James Tour, James Woodward, Karl Popper, large language models, Larry Laudan, law, Lex Fridman, living things, materialism, mathematics, mechanism, methodological naturalism, Michael Levin, Nancy Cartwright, naturalism, ontology, origin of life, patterns, Paul Feyerabend, philosophy, Pierre Duhem, Plato, Platonic space, pseudoscience, Richard Dawkins, Sandra Mitchell, scientific theory, SETI, steganography, Stephen Meyer, testability, testing, thermostats, Thomas Kuhn, Tufts University, Willard Van Orman Quine Michael Levin and the Philosophy of Intelligent Design William A. Dembski January 20, 2026 Intelligent Design, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science 36 Levin is not a reflexive Darwinian materialist. Moreover, he touches on many themes that intelligent design theorists touch on. Read More ›
Homo_neanderthalensis,_The_Natural_History_Museum_Vienna,_20210730_1225_1278 Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 14, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , archaeologists, archaeology, art, Bible, Carly Cassella, cave art, caves, Darwinian paradigm, Darwinism, evolution, fire, human origins, King Tut, Neanderthals, Paul Pettitt, Rosetta Stone, Science Alert, subhumans, The Conversation, University of Durham Perhaps Neanderthals Never Truly Went Extinct Denyse O’Leary November 14, 2025 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology 5 A critical part of the original tale of the Neanderthals is that, because they were stupid, we smarter, more evolved modern humans finished them off. Read More ›
2560px-LargeBostonPublicGardenSketchbook-AWomanReadin Type post Author Peter Biles Date August 21, 2025 CategoriesCultural AnthropologyEvolution Tagged , art, beauty, death, evolution, fiction, honor, human life, human nature, literature, love, machines, meaning, movies, philosophers, pornography, Roger Scruton, scientism, social media, universe, Wheaton College In a Materialistic Universe, Literature Doesn’t Make Sense Peter Biles August 21, 2025 Cultural Anthropology, Evolution 4 Some assume humanity’s longstanding appreciation for art, be it literary, visual, or musical, has evolutionary groundings. Read More ›