tennis Type post Author Brian Miller Date September 14, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , "poor design", agnostics, ankle, anterior cruciate ligament, appendix, atheism, bones, Bristol University, Cambridge University, evolution, evolutionary assumptions, Human Errors, intelligent design, knee, motion, Nathan Lents, retina, shoulders, skeletal joints, Stuart Burgess, Westminster Conference on Science and Faith, wisdom teeth, wrist Burgess: Claims of “Poor Design” in Skeletal Joints Are Based on Critics’ Lack of Training in Engineering Brian Miller September 14, 2022 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Science 5 Burgess’s lecture confronts one of the most common abuses of science aimed at suppressing the evidence for design in biology. Read More ›
cave fish Type post Author Brian Miller Date May 17, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Brian Miller, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, design logic, Discovery Institute, Eugene Wigner, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, living systems, microevolution, Nathan Lents, physicists, shoulders, Systems Biology Brian Miller: “The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Engineering in the Biological Sciences” Brian Miller May 17, 2022 Biology, Engineering, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 2 Dr. Miller takes on a number of specific examples including the celebrated eyeless cavefish, which he “used to think was an absolute win for microevolution.” Read More ›