Líneas_de_Nazca,_Nazca,_Perú,_2015-07-29,_DD_49 Type post Author David Coppedge Date October 28, 2024 CategoriesArchaeologyIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , algorithms, anthropologists, archaeologists, camelids, design detection, design filter, geoglyphs, graffiti, historians, history, humanoids, intelligent design, Leiden University, New Scientist, Peru, PNAS, The New Scientist, UNESCO Using AI to Discover Intelligent Design David Coppedge October 28, 2024 Archaeology, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 7 Hundreds of faint archaeological geoglyphs were found by training AI on aerial photographs of the Nazca plain in Peru. Read More ›
Mount-Rushmore Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date January 23, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , algorithmic specified complexity, aliens, American history, bacterial flagellum, biological systems, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, Discovery Institute Dallas, humanoids, humans, images, information, Mount Rushmore, Robert J. Marks II, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert Algorithmic Specified Complexity: Measuring Mount Rushmore Jonathan Witt January 23, 2021 Intelligent Design 1 A non-humanoid gelatinous alien might assign no meaning to the faces on Mount Rushmore if the alien had never seen a humanoid. Read More ›
Miracle of the Cell Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 24, 2020 CategoriesChemistryFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysicsTechnology Tagged , humanoids, intelligent design, Michael Behe, Michael Denton, nature, purpose, The Miracle of the Cell, universe Behe on Denton’s Latest: “The Universe Miraculously Got [It] Right” David Klinghoffer September 24, 2020 Chemistry, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physics, Technology 1 "Michael Denton is the world’s most profound thinker about the physical and chemical requirements for the existence of a humanoid species like ourselves." Read More ›