crocodile eye Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date April 24, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , air, birds, blood, breath-holding, breathing, cardiovascular system, cold-bloodedness, crocodiles, Dallas, evolution, glycolysis, hard problems, heart, hematological system, hemoglobin, humans, intelligent design, Kate Winslet, lungs, oxygen, reptiles, respiratory system, Steve Laufmann, Tampa, tissues, trachea, ventricle, Wikipedia, Your Designed Body How Does the Crocodile Hold Its Breath So Long? Howard Glicksman April 24, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 13 The actress Kate Winslet can hold her breath for seven and a quarter minutes. A crocodile, though, can hold his breath for hours. Read More ›
Icefish Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 27, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , Antarctic icefish, BIO-Complexity, bloodstream, capillaries, cardiovascular system, erythrocytes, evolution, Gregory Sloop, heart, hematocrit, hemoglobin, icefish, intelligent design, kidneys, notothenioids, oxygen, peer-reviewed literature, red blood cells, teleology, teleosts, vasculature, viscosity Scientific Paper Argues Antarctic Icefish “Designed to Utilize Hemoglobinless Blood” Casey Luskin March 27, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Science 4 “Proponents of intelligent design see customizations to decrease blood viscosity as examples of teleology in biology.” Read More ›
rowers Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date November 30, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , artifacts, bone marrow, bones, cardiovascular system, cells, choreography, coffee, coordination, gastrointestinal system, human body, Immune System, integration, intelligent design, lymphatic system, nervous system, orchestration, organization, oxygen, red blood cells, reproductive system, respiratory system, sawmill, single-celled organism, skeletal system, skin, specialization Your Intelligently Designed Body Is a System of Systems Howard Glicksman and Steve Laufmann November 30, 2022 Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine 9 To be alive, every cell in your body needs solutions to a complicated set of problems. Read More ›
hawk eye Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 15, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Arabidopsis, cardiovascular system, epigenetics, evolution, genome, Ghana, hawk, intelligent design, Israel, Lamarckian theory, Lamarckism, natural selection, Nature (journal), Neo-Darwinism, non-random mutation, University of Haifa Paper Provides More Evidence that Mutations Aren’t Random Casey Luskin March 15, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 A news release from the University of Haifa pulls no punches about the implications. Read More ›
red-blood-cells Type post Date July 6, 2020 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Andrew McDiarmid, blood, cardiovascular system, Charles Darwin, common descent, evolution, Evolution and Intelligent Design in a Nutshell, evolutionists, hemoglobin, Howard Glicksman, ID the Future, information, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, oxygen, red blood cells, Robert Waltzer In a Nutshell: Three Problems for Evolution Science and Culture July 6, 2020 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 1 Biologist Robert Waltzer briefly details the engineering wonder that permits oxygen to be carried by the blood. Read More ›