Humpback_stellwagen_edit Type post Date August 7, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , bats, BBC News, Chinese Academy of Sciences, cockroach, engineers, geckos, humpback whale, intelligent design, Max Planck Institute, Nature Communications, Northwestern University, pollen, squid, U.C. Irvine, U.C. San Diego, University of Bristol, University of Massachusetts at Amherst Human Engineers Can’t Top These Biological Intelligent Designs Science & Culture August 7, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 In labs around the world, scientists are fascinated by living designs. Here are just a few examples of what is being reported on a weekly basis. Read More ›
gecko-2048x1075 Type post Date May 29, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , American Chemical Society, biologists, Biomimetics, biomimicry, butterfly wings, China, coral, Duke University, engineers, geckos, Georgia Tech, intelligent design, Johns Hopkins University, leaf, leaves, materials science, New Scientist, polymers, telescopes Applied Intelligent Design: Engineers Know Engineering When They See It Science & Culture May 29, 2020 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 9 The adhesive properties of gecko toe pads, based on atomic van der Waals attraction, have been understood for years now. Read More ›
sponge Type post Author Douglas Axe Date February 11, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, environmental conditions, fireflies, geckos, Hans Vodder, Howard Van Till, insects, intelligent design, lungs, mice, orcas, origami, statues, theistic evolution, Undeniable (book) Of Statues and Sponges — Progress in My Conversation with a Theistic Evolutionist Douglas Axe February 11, 2019 Intelligent Design 8 Only by sheer coincidence would blind factors produce such remarkable things, and coincidence is never that lucky. Read More ›
gecko toes Type post Date January 8, 2019 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, ants, Biomimetics, biomimicry, complexity, creativity, Darwinism, Francis Bacon, geckos, intelligent design, nature, peer review, PLOS ONE, Research, scientific revolutions Is Biology Approaching the Threshold of Design Acceptance? Science & Culture January 8, 2019 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design 6 A recent biology paper inches up to the edge of design advocacy, without using the phrase “intelligent design.” Read More ›