Valley_View_Yosemite_August_2013_002 Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date April 4, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsBotanyEnvironment & ClimateFaith & Science Tagged , American South, autobiography, barometers, Bible, California, clocks, daydreaming, health, inflammation, James Hutchings, Jeanne Carr, John Muir, Journal of Experimental Psychology, lamplighters, Madison, motivation, national parks, naturalists, nature, nostalgia, pain, physiology, sawmills, Sierra Nevada, stream of consciousness, The Story of My Boyhood and Youth, thinking, wilderness, Wisconsin State Fair, Yosemite Valley Why John Muir Chose Nature Over Machines Andrew McDiarmid April 4, 2025 Bioethics, Botany, Environment & Climate, Faith & Science 8 The famous naturalist put human inventions aside to reap the benefits of nature. Read More ›
thermometer Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date February 26, 2024 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , air conditioning, aspirin, bacteria, blood vessels, body heat, body temperature, brain, catalysis, chills, enzymes, evolution, fever, heat, hypothalamus, infection, inflammation, intelligent design, muscle tone, muscles, neurons, ovens, skin, sweating, temperature, thermostats, white blood cells In Its Design, the Body’s Thermostat Resembles Human Technology Jonathan McLatchie February 26, 2024 Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 6 The existence of thermostatic control of our body temperature is not at all surprising supposing life to be the product of a purposeful engineer. Read More ›
larvae 2 Type post Date September 2, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __edited, arthritis, caterpillar, cellulose, Charles Darwin, Duke University, engineers, evolution, Evolution News, inflammation, intelligent design, joints, larvae, macrophages, maggots, McGill University, mutations, National Science Foundation, natural selection, Nature (journal), pectin, U.S. Army, University of Arizona Design Everywhere: When Maggots Fly, and More Science and Culture September 2, 2019 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 10 Believe it or not, there are amazing discoveries being made that owe nothing to Darwin, at least not explicitly. Read More ›
19.47 Type post Date November 19, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Alzheimer’s, apoptosis, Biological Information: New Perspectives, brain, cells, Cornell University, Darwin Devolves, DNA repair, Douglas Axe, eggs, Immune System, inflammation, intelligent design, John Sanford, memory, mice, Michael Behe, mutations, National Institutes of Health, New York University, oocyte, pathogen, Quanta Magazine, Research, Robert J. Marks II, skin, stem cells, UC Davis, William A. Dembski Memory — New Research Reveals Cells Have It, Too Science and Culture November 19, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 A memory of past events helps a cell learn how to respond to recurring threats and protect the genome. Read More ›