Bat Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date January 20, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , bats, birds, birth canal, carbon dioxide, caves, Charles Darwin, DNA, eggs, evolution, fish, flipping, forme frust, genetics, giraffes, hanging, horses, intelligent design, Keep It Simple Sailor, mammals, neo-Darwinists, New York Post, nutrients, organs, oxygen, porcupines, quills, red blood cells, singing, skunks, The God Proofs, waste products, wings, young people Doctor’s Diary: Have We Overlooked Common Sense? Geoffrey Simmons January 20, 2026 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 8 Take bats, for example. Many types eat upside down, yet they flip to eliminate wastes. 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 ›