panda Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date May 9, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , bamboo, Darwinian theory, dexterity, digits, engineering, giant pandas, GUT, ID the Future, intelligent design, mammals, manipulation systems, microbiome, optimal panda principle, Panda's Thumb, podcast, Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig, wrist bone More Than a Thumb: Integrated Design in the Giant Panda Andrew McDiarmid May 9, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Zoology 3 Is the famous “panda’s thumb” evidence of unguided evolutionary processes, or is it a masterpiece of engineering. Read More ›
shower Type post Date January 2, 2021 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , agriculture, asteroids, Cyanobacteria, Darwinists, ecosystems, Elizabeth Pennisi, fungi, human health, intelligent design, lichen, Mars, microbes, microbiome, mites, Nature (journal), nematode, pathogens, protists, Ryugu, skin, soil, springtails, tardigrades, Yale University Frontiers of ID: Microscopic Ecologies Science and Culture January 2, 2021 Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine 8 Public health lecturer James Hamblin at Yale decided to go without showers — for five years! Read More ›
Steven-Bruckbauer Type post Date April 17, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, bacteria, Current Biology, Darwin Devolves, DNA repair, E. coli, evolution, fungi, HGT, honeybees, horizontal gene transfer, hybridization, ID the Future, introgression, Michael Behe, microbiome, mutations, PLOS Biology, PNAS, radiation, RNA polymerase, Stanford University, Taiwan, University of Barcelona Testing Behe’s Principle that Darwin Devolves Science and Culture April 17, 2019 Evolution 9 We looked at some papers claiming to see evolution happening in real time, to see if natural selection has actually invented a new function, or just broke an existing function. Read More ›