BrucodiSfingedellEuforbia3 Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date August 19, 2025 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , Andrew McDiarmid, bacteria, behavior, biochemistry, biological information, biology, biosignatures, cells, cognition, communication, Darwinism, decision-making, digestion, emergent properties, emergentism, emotions, Eric Hedin, goals, heart rate, human beings, ID the Future, information processing, intelligent design, interviews, life, nervous system, physical laws, physicists, rocks, sensory input, sentient beings, single-celled organisms, stars, undirected processes, water Physicist Eric Hedin: Information Processing as a Hallmark of Life Andrew McDiarmid August 19, 2025 Biology, Intelligent Design 3 I begin a two-part conversation with Dr. Eric Hedin, a physicist and author who’s been asking bold questions about the hidden patterns of life. Read More ›
neural-landscape-with-densely-packed-neurons-selective-focus Type post Author Michael Egnor Date May 6, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & MindPhilosophy Tagged , abstract thought, Aristotle, blood pressure, brain function, brain state, breathing, Denyse O'Leary, Edward Feser, elementary particles, emotion, heart rate, hormones, intellect, James Ross, logic, matter, measurements, memory, Michael Egnor, mind, movement, neuroscience, perception, photons, Plato, precision, puppy, retinal cells, soul, triangle, uncertainty, Uncertainty Principle, will The Logical Basis of the Immaterial Mind Michael Egnor May 6, 2025 Anatomy, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy 5 The indeterminacy of matter precludes brain states from forming the basis of abstract thought. Simple logic points to this truth. Read More ›
012_Wild_Chamois_Riederalp_Photo_by_Giles_Laurent Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date September 3, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignMedicineTechnology Tagged , blood pressure, blood vessels, cell membranes, cellular biology, cytoskeleton, death, DNA, Douglas Axe, evolutionary biologists, evolutionary biology, evolutionists, gene regulatory networks, genes, heart rate, hospice, James Tour, laws of nature, Marcos Eberlin, molecular biology, multicellular organism, muscle cells, RNA, Santa Fe Institute, The Extracellular Space (series), water, Your Designed Body Why Evolution Struggles to Explain the Transition to Multicellularity Howard Glicksman September 3, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Medicine, Technology 10 It is as if evolutionary biologists don’t take death into account. All their theories seem to work like magic. Read More ›
heart Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date July 30, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignMedicineTechnology Tagged , Asa Gray, athletes, blood, blood pressure, blood vessels, calcium, carbon dioxide, Charles Darwin, circulatory system, Communications Biology, Darwin’s Bluff, embryo, evolution, glucose, great apes, hard problems, heart, heart rate, humans, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Michael Behe, natural selection, oxygen, placenta, potassium, Robert Shedinger, selective pressure, Steve Laufmann, temperature, Your Designed Body Exposing the Heart of Neo-Darwinism Howard Glicksman July 30, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Medicine, Technology 21 At complete rest, for your organs and tissues to work properly, your heart must pump out about five liters of blood per minute. Read More ›
blue-whale Type post Date December 9, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, blue whale, Caltech, capsid, cytoplasm, DNA, Escherichia coli, evolution, geodesic dome, heart rate, intelligent design, machinery, marine biologists, nanotechnology, NOAA, Stanford University Whales, Bees, and Viruses: Intelligent Design from Biggest to Smallest Science and Culture December 9, 2019 Intelligent Design 8 What’s bigger than a blue whale? Smaller than a virus? At the extremes and everywhere in between, life shows ingenious design. Read More ›