Edouard_Manet_-_Basket_of_Fruit_-_Google_Art_Project Type post Author Eric Hedin Date September 4, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , animals, bananas, berries, birds, Cretaceous Period, digestion, dinosaurs, fertilization, flowering plants, foresight, fruit, intelligent design, nutrition, optimization, potassium, seeds, The Privileged Planet, vitamin C Fruit Is Designed for Life Eric Hedin September 4, 2024 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 6 This type of multi-purpose optimization speaks more of intelligent foresight and design than random adaptation. 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, fruit, Harvard University, human brain, maize, Michael Denton, nuts, pancakes, planetary fine-tuning, roots, salt, 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 ›
Zinc Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 14, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignLife SciencesTechnology Tagged , carbon dioxide, Casey Luskin, Cell (journal), Charles Darwin, elements, fruit, intelligent design, leaves, meat, metals, Michael Denton, Middle Ages, Nicolaus Copernicus, primal blueprint, prior fitness, proteins, seafood, seeds, The Miracle of Man, The Miracle of the Cell, Vanderbilt University, water cycle, zinc Zinc and the Miracle of Man David Coppedge June 14, 2022 Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Technology 10 Elemental zinc pulls together multiple themes that biologist Michael Denton writes about in his new book. Read More ›
American Museum of Natural History Type post Date June 23, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , American Museum of Natural History, birds, Brazil, convergence, Darwinism, extinction, fruit, macroevolution, molecular phylogeny, predictions, Science (journal), seeds, speciation, Switzerland What Do Biologists Really Know About Macroevolution? Science & Culture June 23, 2021 Evolution 8 There lives in biology a great consensus truth that evaporates upon close scrutiny. Read More ›
D. melanogaster 2 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date October 26, 2018 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, alcohol, biological information, Darwin's Doubt, Drosophila melanogaster, enzyme, evolution, evolutionary biology, fitness, fruit, genes, genotype, Günter Bechly, intelligent design, Nature Ecology and Evolution, phenotype, proteins, Stephen Meyer, word salad On the Evolutionary Origin of New Genes, Stephen Meyer Is Vindicated Again Casey Luskin October 26, 2018 Evolution 9 Most studies simply infer or invent some story about the evolution of a gene without any experimental tests. Read More ›
tree-person-2 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date April 16, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsBotany Tagged , __k-review, anti-humanism, autotrophs, book reviews, ecocide, environmentalism, fruit, genocide, New York Times, peas, rationality, science, sexual reproduction, Switzerland, The Hague, trees No, Trees Are Not People Too Wesley J. Smith April 16, 2018 Bioethics, Botany 3 Novelist Barbara Kingsolver seriously asserts, in her review of a novel in which trees are characters, that they are people too. Read More ›