Earth Type post Author Granville Sewell Date March 5, 2026 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignPlanetology Tagged , Albuquerque, algorithms, alternative splicing, amino acid sequences, Andrew McDiarmid, Brian Josephson, Cambrian Explosion, Cambridge University, Center for Science and Culture, David Waltham, digital information, discoveries, earth, Earth-like planets, enzymes, fundamental constants, genes, ID the Future, information processing, initial conditions, junk DNA, life, Lucky Planet, Michael Kent, molecular biology, molecular machines, mutation, natural selection, physics, Return of the God Hypothesis, Sandia National Laboratories, spliceosome, Stephen Meyer, universe, Why Evolution Is Different Stay Informed about the Evidence for Design, with Michael Kent Granville Sewell March 5, 2026 Biology, Intelligent Design, Planetology 8 Technological advances have led to the discovery of planets outside our solar system, with news heralding the discovery of many “earth-like” planets. Read More ›
Sympetrumflaveolum-sideaka Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date February 14, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , beta-lactamase, Cambridge, Casey Luskin, cookies, design intuition, Douglas Axe, dragonflies, England, enzymes, ID the Future, mutation, peer-reviewed research, philosophers, podcasts, protein scientists, The Comprehensive Guide to Science and Faith, theophobes, Undeniable (book) Axe and Luskin on the Design Intuition and Its Critics Andrew McDiarmid February 14, 2026 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 2 The numbers don’t lie. So why do so many academic biologists and other scholars resist the design implications of Axe’s research? Read More ›