MichaelLevin Type post Author William A. Dembski Date January 20, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhilosophyPhilosophy of Science Tagged , AI Overview, archaeology, art, Bas van Fraassen, biology, ChatGPT, complex specified information, computation, computer science, Conservation of Information, control, cryptography, Darwinian theory, Discovery Institute, Ernest Nagel, experiment, fecundity, Forensics, function, gnana yoga, Grok, Hinduism, ID 3.0 Research Program, Imre Lakatos, information, intelligent design, James Tour, James Woodward, Karl Popper, large language models, Larry Laudan, law, Lex Fridman, living things, materialism, mathematics, mechanism, methodological naturalism, Michael Levin, Nancy Cartwright, naturalism, ontology, origin of life, patterns, Paul Feyerabend, philosophy, Pierre Duhem, Plato, Platonic space, pseudoscience, Richard Dawkins, Sandra Mitchell, scientific theory, SETI, steganography, Stephen Meyer, testability, testing, thermostats, Thomas Kuhn, Tufts University, Willard Van Orman Quine Michael Levin and the Philosophy of Intelligent Design William A. Dembski January 20, 2026 Intelligent Design, Philosophy, Philosophy of Science 36 Levin is not a reflexive Darwinian materialist. Moreover, he touches on many themes that intelligent design theorists touch on. Read More ›
LIDAR scan Type post Author David Coppedge Date June 22, 2022 CategoriesArchaeologyIntelligent DesignLife SciencesPaleontology Tagged , Amazon, Amazonia, communication, Design Inference, intelligence, intelligent design, Nature News, Nature News and Views, No Free Lunch, pyramids, spacecraft, steganography, University of Bonn, William A. Dembski Detected: Intelligent Designs in the Amazon Jungle David Coppedge June 22, 2022 Archaeology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Paleontology 4 With LIDAR technology, the angle of incidence of a signal can reveal designs hiding in plain sight. Read More ›
DNA Type post Date January 20, 2021 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateIntelligent Design Tagged , amino acids, bacteria, California, cells, Columbia University, CRISPR-Cas9, DNA, Escherichia coli, genes, information, intelligent design, junk DNA, Nature (journal), New York City, ribosomes, semantic information, steganography, translation DNA Storage Goes Biological Science & Culture January 20, 2021 Environment & Climate, Intelligent Design 11 DNA is already known to be an ideal storage medium. Why not use cells to do the hard work? Read More ›
Antikythera mechanism Type post Date January 8, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, 3D printing, amino acids, ancient Greeks, astronauts, bacterium, blueprint, Craig Venter, DNA, information, Internet, New Scientist, proteins, rabbits, scientists, self-replicating machines, steganography, UCLA, University of Oregon DNA of Things: Embedding Machines with Replication Data Science & Culture January 8, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 In 1901, divers brought up from an ancient shipwreck the first part of the Antikythera mechanism made by Greek inventors. Read More ›
Encryption Type post Date July 9, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Aarhus University, alternative splicing, cryptology, Denmark, gene regulation, intelligent design, introns, programmers, RNA, splicing, steganography Encryption System Found in Genes Science & Culture July 9, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 6 A clever method of RNA editing may explain the role of introns embedded in genes, and points to even higher levels of programming. Read More ›