Buffalo nickel Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 8, 2023 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , archaea, boron, cabbage, Casey Luskin, chocolate, cobalt, coffee, coins, copper, corn, Dartmouth College, elements, Harvard School of Public Health, hemoglobin, human body, intelligent design, iron, manganese, Michael Denton, milk, mushrooms, nickel, nuts, onions, organs, oysters, peas, phosphorus, PNAS, potassium, Privileged Species, protein science, rhubarb, The Miracle of the Cell, thyroid gland, tissues, tomatoes, Uppsala University, urine, zinc Brother, Can You Spare a Nickel? It’s Essential for Life, and Likely an Indicator of Intelligent Design David Coppedge June 8, 2023 Biology, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 9 Nickel is an essential element in the human body, but too much is toxic. Here’s another element our planet had to provide. Read More ›
spiral galaxy NGC 6872 Type post Author Paul Nelson Date February 6, 2023 CategoriesAstronomyIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , "God of the gaps", chocolate, Columbia University, David Kipping, design detection, Illinois, intelligence, intelligent causation, intelligent design, Lex Fridman, universe Watch: Here Are Several Minutes of Design-Detection Brainstorming with Lex Fridman Paul Nelson February 6, 2023 Astronomy, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Physics 3 I’ve never heard such a concise account of the principal methodological difficulties of inferring an unconstrained intelligence as a TESTABLE cause. Read More ›
chocolate 1 Type post Author Ann Gauger Date May 6, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, caterpillar, chocolate, intelligent design, love, mutations, natural selection, neutral evolution, pattern, population, proteins, sequence space Love, Chocolate, and Neutral Evolution Ann Gauger May 6, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Neutral evolution means mutations are occurring all the time, and most of the time they are neutral, or nearly neutral. Read More ›