close-up-of-a-bacterium-under-a-microscope-with-vivid-purple-1073522108-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Daniel Witt Date April 11, 2024 CategoriesBotanyIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , archaea, Arthur S. Reber, bacteria, cells, cellular basis of consciousness, cellular cognition, cognition, consciousness, evolution, Evolution “On Purpose”, František Baluška, fungal mind, fungi, intelligent design, mind, minds, Neo-Darwinism, Peter Corning, protozoans, sentience, unguided evolution, William B. Miller Jr. Was God a Bacterium? Daniel Witt April 11, 2024 Botany, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 6 We should acknowledge that this theory is, unlike some similar attempts, at least an actual solution: if true, it would explain how complex life evolved. Read More ›
kinesin Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date September 7, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Barbara McClintock, cells, cellular behavior, cellular cognition, Chance and Necessity, circuitry, cognition, Daniel Nicholson, DNA, electronic circuitry, function, Jacques Monod, Journal of Theoretical Biology, machine, machine conception of the cell, machine metaphor, membranes, molecular biology, nucleic acids, proteins, self-assembly, Sewall Wright Is the Cell a Machine, or More Like a Mind? Robert Shedinger September 7, 2023 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 7 At least as we’re accustomed to thinking in our age of AI, the alternative to a machine is a mind. Read More ›