coffee and cream Type post Author Eric Hedin Date July 6, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , ChatGPT, coffee, complex specified information, creativity, Energy, freedom, function, heat, humans, information, intelligent design, kinetic energy, knowledge, Law of Conservation of Information, life, luck, meaning, mind, nature, physical objects, printing press, quantum mechanics, Second Law of Thermodynamics, William A. Dembski Physics, Information Loss, and Intelligent Design Eric Hedin July 6, 2023 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Physics 6 Imagine a system where heat flows from a hot region to a cold region under the constraint of the traditional second law of thermodynamics. Read More ›
Buffalo nickel Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 8, 2023 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , archaea, boron, cabbage, Casey Luskin, cobalt, coffee, copper, corn, Dartmouth College, elements, hemoglobin, human body, intelligent design, iron, manganese, Michael Denton, milk, mushrooms, nickel, nuts, onions, organs, oysters, peas, phosphorus, PNAS, potassium, Privileged Species, protein science, The Miracle of the Cell, tissues, 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 ›
rowers Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date November 30, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , artifacts, bone marrow, bones, cardiovascular system, cells, coffee, coordination, human body, Immune System, integration, intelligent design, nervous system, orchestration, organization, oxygen, red blood cells, respiratory 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 ›
Mount Rushmore Type post Author Brian Miller Date August 27, 2020 CategoriesEngineeringIntelligent DesignScience Education Tagged , amino-acid sequences, atheism, ATP synthase, Australia, biological systems, Cambrian Explosion, coffee, DNA, explanatory filter, fossil record, improbability, information, intelligent design, Internet, Mount Rushmore, mutations, natural processes, presidents, proteins, rock, William A. Dembski, young people Here Is How to Teach Intelligent Design to Young People Brian Miller August 27, 2020 Engineering, Intelligent Design, Science Education 9 The first principle is helping participants discover the evidence for design themselves. Read More ›