HumpbackwhalebyChristopherMichel Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 2, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , BBC News, breaching, Captain Dave Anderson, curiosity, Darwinian evolution, dinosaurs, dolphins, Endangered Species Act, Endangered Species Research, fingerprint, fins, fishing companies, fishing gear, flukes, ghost fishing, Glacier Bay, governments, great white sharks, Hudson River, humpback whales, intelligence, Live Science, mammals, marine biologists, Martin Stelfox, migration, mugging, National Geographic, New Jersey, new york, New York City, North Atlantic, North Pacific, Oregon State University, parasites, right whales, sea turtles, shark nets, splashing, testes, tour boats, University of Queensland, vocal communications, vocalizations, whale calf, whales We Are Still Learning About the Wonderful Design of Humpback Whales David Coppedge February 2, 2026 Intelligent Design, Zoology 6 Design aspects of whales defy explanations based on Darwinian evolution, such as their complex vocal communications and the internal testes of the males. Read More ›
scorpion Type post Author Bijan Nemati Date January 5, 2023 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife SciencesPhysical SciencesScience Tagged , arachnids, Darwinian theory, Irreducible Complexity, Oregon State University, sensors Minimal Complexity Problem in Prey Detection by the Sand Scorpion Bijan Nemati January 5, 2023 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Physical Sciences, Science 3 The scorpion can detect tiny vibrations, of order 1 Angstrom (the size of a hydrogen atom) in amplitude, that emanate from its prey. Read More ›
Sisyphus Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date February 11, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , blind chance, Bruce Alberts, defining science, demarcation criteria, Epicureans, evolution, experimental science, intelligent design, Johannes Kepler, Michael Ruse, Müller cells, Nathan Lents, National Academy of Sciences, naturalism, New York Times, Oregon State University, retina, scientific method, Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence, SETI, Sisyphus, Stoics, teleology Is Intelligent Design a Science Stopper? Cornelius Hunter February 11, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 Consider a box with an internal divider such that the box is divided into two separate compartments, A and B. Read More ›
tardigrade Type post Date November 1, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, amber, Caenorhabditis elegans, California, Current Biology, Darwinists, evolution, intelligent design, Live Science, Marcos Eberlin, nematode, Oregon State University, pharmaceuticals, proteins, roundworm, tardigrades, UC San Diego Evolutionary Enigmas, Tiny Tardigrades Strut Their Superpowers Science & Culture November 1, 2019 Evolution 7 Darwinists struggle to explain why any creature would evolve protections from environmental conditions it had never experienced. Read More ›
zebra finch Type post Date July 24, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, BIO-Complexity, biologic institute, Charles Darwin, dependency graph, evolution, Evolutionary Informatics Lab, evolutionists, Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, genera, genetic data, humans, hybridization, intelligent design, Metazoa, Neanderthals, Oregon State University, scientific community, software, species, Tree of Life, Winston Ewert, zebrafish Response to a Critic: But What About Undirected Graphs? Science & Culture July 24, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 A dependency graph is not any old ad hoc hypothesis. It was posited because it is something that we observe in software engineering. Read More ›
3.7.2018--Fashion Promos 2018-- Photos by Joe Angeles/WUSTL Photos Type post Date April 2, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Actin, cells, chromosomes, Current Biology, cytoskeleton, Douglas Axe, dynein, evolutionary theory, microtubule, molecular motors, Nature Communications, Oregon State University, Origin, Research, Undeniable (book), University of Warwick, Washington University Researchers Find that in Cells, Trains Run on Time Science & Culture April 2, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 9 Man-made railways can’t come close to the efficiency and flexibility of those at work inside your body right now. Read More ›