PalaisdelaDecouverteTyrannosaurusrexp1050042 Type post Author David Coppedge Date September 5, 2025 CategoriesGeologyIntelligent Design Tagged , A. G. Werner, apatite, aquamarine, Australia, bacteria, bone, calcium, collagen, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, dinosaurs, enamel, fluoridated water, fluoride toothpaste, food, fungi, geology, homonyms, Howard Glicksman, igneous rocks, lava, magma, metamorphic rocks, Michael Denton, microbes, minerals, Mohs hardness scale, osteocytes, phosphorus, Privileged Species, Quartz, Secrets of the Human Body, sharks, teeth, Tyrannosaurus rex How We Bite with Apatite: The Wonders of a Hard Mineral David Coppedge September 5, 2025 Geology, Intelligent Design 11 Explore the features of a remarkable mineral erupted from volcanoes that is found in our teeth. How did it get there? Read More ›
Immortal-Mind-Social-Media-Graphics-1920x1080px-No-Button Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 3, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , bone, brain, consciousness, corpus callosotomy, Denyse O'Leary, EEG machine, epilepsy, legs, Michael Egnor, mind, neuroscience, neurosurgery, pain medications, recovery room, seizures, skull, split-brain surgery, surgery, vital signs New Book, The Immortal Mind, Out Today — The Brain Can Be Split, but Not the Mind Michael Egnor and Denyse O’Leary June 3, 2025 Anatomy, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 4 Even when the brain is split in half, many important aspects of the mind remain unified. Thus, the mind is something that the brain isn’t. Read More ›
money tail Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 29, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionMedicine Tagged , birth defects, bone, Carly Cassella, cartilage, Charles Darwin, children, Darwinian theory, doctors, embryo, evolution, evolutionary assumptions, human tails, Karl Giberson, notochord, ScienceAlert, spinal column, spinal cord, theistic evolutionists ScienceAlert Vindicates My Findings About Human “Tails” — They Are NOT an Evolutionary Atavism Casey Luskin June 29, 2023 Evolution, Medicine 6 The article cites new literature that has appeared since I published my own review nine years ago. Read More ›
tendons Type post Date March 26, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, basketball, bone, brain, Canada, collagen, design constraint, eyes, Howard Glicksman, Irreducible Complexity, macroscale, molecular machines, Nanoscale, piano, running, Scientific Reports, tendons, tissue, walking Tendons Are Irreducibly Complex Science and Culture March 26, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 A simple tissue we take for granted turns out to represent another example of irreducible complexity in the human body. Read More ›