gymnastics Type post Author David Coppedge Date April 20, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , amniotes, amphibians, babies, balance, calyx, Current Biology, fish, hair cells, head, Howard Glicksman, mammals, mechanotransduction, middle ear, morphology, nervous system, neurons, old age, PNAS, potassium channels, reflexes, spine, Sports, Steve Laufmann, Your Designed Body Balance: Bipeds Need It; Where Did It Come From? David Coppedge April 20, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 “The calyx appeared,” says Dr. Rob Raphael. A more magical explanation could hardly be fabricated. Read More ›
Tour Metaxas Dallas Type post Date February 1, 2023 CategoriesChemistryMedicineOrigin of LifeScienceTechnology Tagged , Eric Metaxas, graphene, Houston, ID the Future, inventions, James Tour, nanotechnology, Rice University, Socrates in the City, spine, Texas Socrates in the City: James Tour on Nanotech Science and Culture February 1, 2023 Chemistry, Medicine, Origin of Life, Science, Technology 1 Tour explains some of the inventions coming out of his Rice University lab, including molecular cars and astonishing graphene technologies. Read More ›
spine Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date June 27, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , __edited, anus, axon, brain, Darwinists, Doctor's Diary (series), embryo, eye, heart, intelligent design, lips, locomotion, nerve cells, nervous system, neurons, optic nerves, pain, pressure, sexual organs, spine, stomach, temperature, vibration Doctor’s Diary: The Design of the Human Nervous System Geoffrey Simmons June 27, 2019 Intelligent Design, Medicine 5 Our skin and our insides are laced with an invisible, highly sophisticated, selective, neurological netting. Read More ›