jumping-and-touching-knee-with-elbow-stock-photo-stockpack-a-292010599-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Brian Miller Date February 12, 2026 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , biology, bridges, design logic, Duke University, dysteleology, evolution, human anatomy, human body, Human Errors, human spine, intelligent design, joints, knee, load-baring capacity, longevity, motion, Nathan Lents, optimal design, poor design, Steven Vogel, Stuart Burgess, suboptimal design, teleology, tinkering, Ultimate Engineering, upright walking, vertebral disks Happy Darwin Day! Significance of New Book on Human Anatomy Cannot Be Overstated Brian Miller February 12, 2026 Anatomy, Engineering, Intelligent Design 3 Dr. Burgess's own research proved that knee joint geometry and supporting structures are optimally designed to achieve multiple objectives. Read More ›
dna-sequencing-result-visualisation-researches-in-genetics-s-1635177604-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Emily Reeves Date January 15, 2026 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , AmiGO, biological networks, biology, computers, coordination, Darwinian evolution, data networks, datasets, E. coli, engineering, Gene Ontology, genomics, glycolysis, intelligent design, Introduction to Systems Biology, isoforms, Joel Bader, junk DNA, living systems, long non-coding RNAs, metabolomics, molecular biology, Molecular Systems Biology, mRNA, mutations, optimal design, optimism, proteins, proteomics, reductionist biology, Rube Goldberg, Ruedi Aebersold, smartphones, Systems Biology, technology, transcription network, transcriptomics, Uri Alon, Yuri Lazebnik Systems Biology and Intelligent Design: A Natural Fit Emily Reeves January 15, 2026 Biology, Intelligent Design 8 My optimism comes from how powerfully top-down design has succeeded in giving us the complex systems of the modern world. Read More ›