farming Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date December 18, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsEnvironment & ClimateLife Sciences Tagged , agriculture, beef, California, corn, environmentalists, Europe, food, global warming, human benefit, New York Times, pesticides, pollution, Sri Lanka, United States Learning to Love Industrial Farming Wesley J. Smith December 18, 2024 Bioethics, Environment & Climate, Life Sciences 5 "Old MacDonald-style farms where soil is nurtured with love and animals have names rather than numbers may sound environmentally friendly." Read More ›
bread Type post Author Eric Hedin Date September 18, 2023 CategoriesBiologyFine-tuningIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Americas, Asia, bread, cooking, corn, domestication, Europe, evolution, Fire-Maker, food production, fruit, Harvard University, human brain, maize, Michael Denton, nuts, pancakes, planetary fine-tuning, pulses, rice, Richard Wrangham, roots, salt, seed dispersal, wheat For Our Daily Bread, Thank Planetary Fine-Tuning Eric Hedin September 18, 2023 Biology, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 The existence of progenitor food crops (edible plants) on Earth was a necessary starting point for the availability of our food. Read More ›
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 ›
topiary-animals Type post Date March 13, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, Ann Gauger, bacteria, bioengineering, Charles Darwin, Charles Thaxton, corn, Craig Venter, CRISPR-Cas9, design filter, Design Inference, DNA, Dogs, Douglas Axe, ETH Zurich, Galápagos Islands, genotype, intelligent design, maize, Mars rover, natural, Nature (journal), No Free Lunch, Paul Nelson, phenotype, Roger Olsen, Technion, The Design Revolution, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Walter Bradley, William A. Dembski, wolves Blurring the Line Between Natural and Artificial Science and Culture March 13, 2020 Intelligent Design 9 As technology mimics nature, at what point might future investigators be unsure about natural versus intelligent causes? Read More ›
Type post Date April 11, 2012 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, corn, Darwin, evolution, Jay Richards, maize, science Children of the Corn: A Reader Objects Science and Culture April 11, 2012 Evolution 1 "Grant me Zea, and I'll evolve you corn" is a whole lot like Darwin saying, "Grant me a mudfish..." for the origin of Vertebrata. Read More ›
Type post Date April 6, 2012 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, corn, Darwinian evolution, evolution, Jay Richards, maize, speciation Sorry, Ring Species Do Not Provide Good Evidence for the Origin of New Species by the Darwinian Mechanism Science and Culture April 6, 2012 Evolution, Intelligent Design 1 If a ring species existed it would not be an example of observed speciation. Read More ›