atomium Type post Author David Coppedge Date December 1, 2020 CategoriesChemistryIntelligent Design Tagged , angstroms, atoms, ATP synthase, bacterial flagellum, biological systems, Boston University, Cryo-EM microscopy, electron microscope, Food and Drug Administration, intelligent design, John E. Walker, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Michael Behe, microglia, microscopy, mitochondria, molecular machines, Nature News and Views, Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, neuroscience, Nobel Prize, optical coherence tomography, PNAS, ribose operon, rotors, Stanford University “Resolution Revolution”: Intelligent Design, Now at the Atomic Level David Coppedge December 1, 2020 Chemistry, Intelligent Design 10 Breakthroughs in imaging are allowing scientists to see iconic molecular machines in unprecedented detail. This will be a great boon for design science. Read More ›
kinesin 2 Type post Date March 16, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Apollo 14, ATP synthase, California, Carnegie Mellon University, Cassini mission, Cryo-EM microscopy, Curiosity rover, Dean Kenyon, flagellum, John West, kinesin, Leonardo da Vinci, Living Waters, Michael Behe, miniature designs, Mount Everest, Museum of the Bible, NASA, National Geographic, Norway, Saturn V, Secrets of the Cell, seeds, The Last Supper, The Magician's Twin, World Magazine Designs in Miniature — Some Are the Most Wonderful of All Science and Culture March 16, 2020 Intelligent Design 10 The smaller a design, the harder it may be to detect. But miniature designs can inspire awe more than large ones. Read More ›