2014-10-DeathValley4x4-209-RacetrackPlaya-pmxsm Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 19, 2025 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateGeologyIntelligent Design Tagged , ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, ant navigation, archaeology, barnacle waterproof glue, Biomimetics, blowholes, butterfly colors, California, cryptology, crystallography, Death Valley, design filter, fine-tuning, forensic science, geomimetics, geophysics, geysers, ice, ice sheets, ID in Action, intelligent design, Jonathan Boreyko, lightning, magnets, mantis shrimp hammers, Oklo reactor, optimization, Racetrack Playa, Racetrack Valley, rocks, sailing stones, Smithsonian Magazine, snowflakes, spider webs, Virginia Tech, volcanoes Is Geomimetics an Intelligent Design Science? Well, Yes and No David Coppedge August 19, 2025 Environment & Climate, Geology, Intelligent Design 7 Biomimetics, the imitation of nature’s designs, clearly qualifies as an ID science. What about “geomimetics” — the imitation of geophysics? Read More ›
Siddhartha Mukherjee Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date March 3, 2017 CategoriesEthicsGeneticsHistory of ScienceScientific Trustworthiness Tagged , __nedited, book reviews, crystallography, DNA, double helix, fame, gene, gene therapy, genomics, Health & Wellness, intelligent design, Linus Pauling, medicine, perverse incentives, Research, Rosalind Franklin, scientific integrity, Watson and Crick Siddhartha Mukherjee’s History of Genomics Is a Story with a Lesson Brendan Dixon March 3, 2017 Ethics, Genetics, History of Science, Scientific Trustworthiness 8 Writing history is hard. The details and dates, people and places can tumble over one another. Read More ›