Lee Cronin Type post Author Brian Miller Date February 16, 2023 CategoriesBiologyChemistryEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , amino acids, cell membranes, cells, cellular metabolism, Dave Farina, hype, investigator interference, James Tour, Lee Cronin, molybdenum, nucleotides, organic chemistry, protocells, reactions, Research, ribose, Rice University, RNA, synthetic chemists On the Origin of Life, James Tour Exposes the Irrelevance of Lee Cronin’s Research Brian Miller February 16, 2023 Biology, Chemistry, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 7 Tour details Cronin’s consistent exaggeration of the progress he and other researchers have made in unraveling the mystery of life’s origin. Read More ›
exoplanet Type post Author David Coppedge Date November 1, 2022 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , ammonia, astrobiology, astrology, Australia, biosignatures, carbon dioxide, Carl Sagan, Casey Luskin, Douglas Axe, habitability, ID the Future, James Webb Space Telescope, meteorites, methane, Michael Denton, molybdenum, Open University, oxygen, ozone, phosphine, polypeptides, Privileged Species, protein space, SETI, solar system, The Conversation, The Privileged Planet, UFOs Search for Habitable Planets Is a Design Detection Exercise David Coppedge November 1, 2022 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 7 The extent of habitable space within all space can serve as a determinant of the plausibility of naturalism vs intelligent design. Read More ›
Greenland Ice Sheet Type post Date December 23, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , Antarctica, calcium, cobalt, Communications Earth & Environment, Design of Life, enzymes, Flight: The Genius of Birds, Freeman Dyson, Freshwater, Geophysical Research Letters, glaciers, Greenland, ice, Illustra Media, iron, krill, magnesium, manganese, materialists, metals, Michael Denton, molybdenum, PNAS, potassium, Privileged Species, rivers, sodium, The Wonder of Water, trace elements, vitamin B12 Glaciers Enhance the Biosphere — By Design Science and Culture December 23, 2020 Intelligent Design 7 Glacial meltwater performs unexpected and surprising roles that benefit life on earth. Read More ›
1280px-Molybdenum_crystaline_fragment_and_1cm3_cube Type post Date December 20, 2019 CategoriesChemistryEarth SciencesIntelligent Design Tagged , __nedited, astrobiology, ATP, bacteria, biomineralization, carbon, chemical energy, Chile, China, diet, DNA replication, Earth’s crust, elements, Energy, entropy, evolution, genetic information, gun, human body, industry, kinetic energy, metal, molecular machines, molybdenum, motility, nitrogen, PNAS, proteins, steel, sulfur, United States Molybdenum Is Stored in Cells by a Powered Piercing Machine Science and Culture December 20, 2019 Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Intelligent Design 6 The metal element 42, molybdenum, is needed in the body in extremely small but vital amounts for enzymes to work properly. Read More ›