Aninstantaneousphotographofafewmembersofa22school Type post Date July 1, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & MindZoology Tagged , Aril Slotte, Barents Sea, fish, herring, Institute for Marine Research, intelligence, Katarina Zimmer, larvae, Lofoten, migration, Nautilus, Norway, plankton, spawning, zooplankton When Schools of Fish Lose Their Memories Science and Culture July 1, 2025 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind, Zoology 4 Because we don’t tend to think of fish as being very smart, we don’t think they could have memories that matter. Read More ›
plankton Type post Author David Coppedge Date March 9, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , chromosomes, convergence, convergent evolution, electromagnetic waves, evolution, evolutionary plasticity, eye, intelligent design, light, light-sensitive spot, Living Waters, Nature (journal), New Scientist, optics, organelles, plankton, University of British Columbia Convergence? One-Celled Creature Has an Eye! David Coppedge March 9, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 “Convergent evolution” is not a process. It is a post-hoc observation based on evolutionary assumptions. Read More ›
Salp Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 22, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , American Geophysical Union, atmosphere, California, carbon, carbon emissions, climate change, diatoms, foresight, global warming, habitability, jellyfish, NASA, Nature Communications, New Zealand, notochord, Penn State, phylogeny, plankton, polychaetes, providence, reporters, Science (journal), sea salps, sea squirts, silicate weathering, Southern California, Southern Ocean, thermostat, tunicates Meet the Ghostly Organisms that Rescue the Planet David Coppedge February 22, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Zoology 9 A man was paddleboarding last month when he came across a mysterious creature three miles off the shoreline of California. Read More ›
grizzly bear Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date August 20, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , __k-review, animals, anthropology, flies, grizzly bear, human beings, locomotion, Montana, natural selection, oysters, plankton, sunlight No, We Are Not “Beasts” Wesley J. Smith August 20, 2018 Bioethics, Human Exceptionalism 4 Maxim Loskutoff recounts the time he and his girlfriend were threatened by a grizzly bear while hiking in Montana. Read More ›