Dance-At-Bougival Type post Author Tova Levengood Date July 14, 2025 CategoriesArtsCultural AnthropologyHuman ExceptionalismIntelligent Design Tagged , Arts Education Policy Review, autism, Bernhard Fink, brain, brain activity, break dancing, Charleston, Constantina Theofanopoulou, dance movement therapy, dancers, dancing, forethought, foxtrot, Health & Wellness, human uniqueness, humans, Kitsap Kats, line dancing, materialism, music, natural selection, neural signaling, neuroplasticity, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, Parkinson’s disease, piano, Reductionism, Sadye Paez, Sandra Klaperski-van der Wal, Stuart Burgess, synchrony, Teresa Borowski, The Miracle of Man, Your Designed Body Designed to Dance? Here’s What Science Says Tova Levengood July 14, 2025 Arts, Cultural Anthropology, Human Exceptionalism, Intelligent Design 12 Dancing is not a mere add-on feature that came a couple of mutations after mankind figured out how to shamble. Read More ›
ballerina Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date May 29, 2025 CategoriesBiologyBotanyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , chaos, dancing, death, detour, disorder, eating, energy state, entropy, equilibrium, Eric Hedin, flying, ID the Future, immortality, intelligent design, intelligent designer, jumping, life, naturalism, organisms, physics, running, specified complexity, swimming, water The Most Unnatural Thing in the Universe Andrew McDiarmid May 29, 2025 Biology, Botany, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 2 We usually think of life as the most natural thing there is — blooming plants, flowing water, the cycles of nature. Read More ›