Samuel_Wilberforce_1805-George-Richmond Type post Author Rt. Revd. Samuel Wilberforce Date April 7, 2025 CategoriesBotanyEvolutionHistory of ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , algae, animals, cats, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell, descendants, Dogs, domestic animals, elephants, England, flies, grasses, infusoria, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Joseph Hooker, Lucretius, mites, mosses, mushrooms, natural history, natural selection, oaks, On the Origin of Species, pigeon-fanciers, propositions, Quarterly Review, reasoning, Roderick Murchison, Siluria, Thomas Henry Huxley, truffles, turnips, variations, Vestiges of Creation, whales, worms, zoophyte “Into the Jungle of Fanciful Assumption”: Excerpts from Samuel Wilberforce on Darwin Rt. Revd. Samuel Wilberforce April 7, 2025 Botany, Evolution, History of Science, Intelligent Design 27 "We have objected to the views with which we have been dealing solely on scientific grounds." Read More ›
lions hunting Type post Author Eric Hedin Date August 30, 2023 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , adaptation, baleen whales, berries, birds, carnivores, cattle, chance, cows, drinking, ecosystem, evolution, fish, food, gills, goats, grasses, grasslands, grazing, herbivores, horses, human intelligence, hummingbirds, intelligent design, krill, livestock, molecules, natural selection, nectar, nuts, prey, seeds, sheep, water, winter, zooplankton Ecosystems — A Tribute to Intelligent Design, or to Chance and Adaptation? Eric Hedin August 30, 2023 Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 6 Thinking about all the species of animals, birds, and fishes, it becomes apparent that each one requires a certain type of food, suitable for its anatomy. Read More ›
grass Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 10, 2022 CategoriesLife SciencesScience Tagged , angiosperms, biosphere, carbon, copper, dairy products, earthworms, eggs, erosion, flowering plants, grass, grasses, grasslands, intelligent design, iron, magnesium, maize, meat, metalloenzymes, Michael Denton, moles, monocots, prior fitness, Privileged Species, Science (journal), zinc Biology Helps Us Understand the Blessing of Grasses David Coppedge August 10, 2022 Life Sciences, Science 7 Don’t walk on the grass, that “often undervalued” form of life, without looking down. It’s amazing down there. Read More ›
Omega Centauri Type post Date August 21, 2018 CategoriesAstronomyIntelligent DesignLife SciencesPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, altitude, apoptosis, Arctic terns, ballet, DNA, Flight: The Genius of Birds, globular clusters, grasses, Immune System, intelligent design, Lund University, metabolism, northern lights, Parker Solar Probe, sun, Sweden, The Privileged Planet, U.C. Riverside, University of New Hampshire, University of Texas From Micro to Macro Scales, Intelligent Design Is in the Details Science and Culture August 21, 2018 Astronomy, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Physical Sciences 7 From the molecular nanomachines within a tiny cell to the large-scale structure of the universe, design is everywhere to be found. Read More ›