Spirale_dentaire_d'helicoprion Type post Author Günter Bechly Date December 27, 2024 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , cartilage, Fossil Friday (series), Permian period, sharks Fossil Friday: A Fossil That Kept Scientists Guessing Günter Bechly December 27, 2024 Anatomy, Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Paleontology 7 Could intelligent design better explain this weird feeding apparatus? Of course. 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 ›
sperm Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date August 5, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , birds, blood, bones, brain, cartilage, chicken-and-egg problem, chromosomes, DNA, Doctor's Diary (series), evolution, evolution of the sexes, female, fertilization, fingers, fish, genitals, hormones, inbreeding, joints, ligaments, male, muscles, natural selection, nerves, occipital lobes, ovum, primates, procreation, Science (journal), Science Advances, sperm, swimming, Wright brothers, zygote Doctor’s Diary: Evolution’s Countless Chicken-and-Egg Conundrums Geoffrey Simmons August 5, 2020 Evolution 8 It turned out last week that scientists have been wrong for 350 years about how sperm swim. Read More ›
Front_views_of_the_Venus_de_Milo Type post Date June 15, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science), Biomimetics, capillaries, carbon, cartilage, detoxification, drug delivery, engineers, erythrocytes, hair, human body, intelligent design, Internet of things, materials science, Michelangelo’s David, MIT, nitrogen, physiologists, red blood cells, Science Advances, synapses, University of Colorado The Human Body as a Biomimetic Inspiration Science and Culture June 15, 2020 Intelligent Design 9 As symbols of the perfection of human form, one might consider the Venus de Milo or Michelangelo’s David. But those don’t show the insides. Read More ›
Gray220 2 Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date June 18, 2018 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, "God of the gaps", "poor design", bones, cartilage, constraints, Darwinists, Douglas Axe, evolution, global warming, Günter Bechly, human body, Human Errors, intelligent design, ligaments, Michael Behe, Nathan Lents, Neo-Darwinism, nuclear war, physiology, Royal Society, Scott Minnich, tendons, Wall Street Journal, War and Peace, wrist The “Botched” Human Body, Revisited Steve Laufmann June 18, 2018 Anatomy, Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 11 As a systems architect, I’ve spent decades designing and implementing large and complex systems of information systems. Read More ›