panda Type post Author Stephen Dilley Date April 8, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Alvin Plantinga, creation, creationism, death, designer, evolution, humans, Incarnation, intelligent design, natural evil, pain, Panda's Thumb, peer-reviewed literature, Peter Van Inwagen, predation, redemption, resurrection, sickness, special creation, Stephen Jay Gould, suboptimality, theology, waste, William A. Dembski Does a Suboptimal Panda’s Thumb Fit Better with Evolution than with Intelligent Design? Stephen Dilley April 8, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 Just how much does evolution expect suboptimal structures? And just how much does intelligent design expect optimal ones? Read More ›
black tailed prairie dog Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date September 16, 2022 CategoriesBiologyChemistryIntelligent DesignPhysicsScience Tagged , bees, biosphere, birds, goal, gymnosperms, honey, intelligent design, natural phenomena, nests, organisms, pollen, predation, prey, purpose, ruminants, salmon, science of purpose, snakes, wolves Defining the “Science of Purpose” Stephen J. Iacoboni September 16, 2022 Biology, Chemistry, Intelligent Design, Physics, Science 3 The "science of purpose" is new to the analytic framework, and is thus obliged to make the case for its claim to validity. Read More ›
Trilobite Type post Date March 15, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, arthropods, biological information, body plans, brain, Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian News, Darwin's Doubt, digestion, evolution, eyes, fossil record, intelligent design, legs, Mars, National Academy of Sciences, oxygen, PNAS, Precambrian, predation, seawater, sexual reproduction, Stephen Meyer, trilobites New Paper Confirms the Trilobite Explosion Science and Culture March 15, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 It’s important to note that the “true tempo of early animal evolution” exists in evolutionists’ imaginations, not in the rocks. Read More ›