ViolinNikolai Type post Author Eric Hedin Date September 4, 2025 CategoriesArtsBiologyIntelligent DesignTechnology Tagged , artificial intelligence, biochemists, cell phones, computers, David Klinghoffer, DNA, electrical engineering, engineering, genome, intelligence, intelligent design, Internet, life, organisms, Plato's Revenge, programming, radios, Richard Sternberg, smart phones, Stephen Iacoboni, technology, violin, Wendell Berry, William Shakespeare Biology, Like Technology, Requires “Something More” Eric Hedin September 4, 2025 Arts, Biology, Intelligent Design, Technology 5 Even when formed to perfection, a violin will not “hale souls out of men’s bodies” unless a master musician draws the bow across the strings. Read More ›
2560px-Jan_steen,_la_visita_del_dottore,_1660-62_ca._02 Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date July 18, 2025 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , Aristotelianism, biology, cancer, Evolution News, faith and science, humans, ID the Future, intentionality, materialism, mechanism, mechanistic view, medical school, oncologists, organisms, physical world, podcast, purpose, random processes, Stephen Iacoboni, Stuart Kauffman, Thomistic philosophy Stephen Iacoboni: Finding Purpose in Medicine and Science Andrew McDiarmid July 18, 2025 Biology, Intelligent Design, Medicine 3 Ultimately, Dr. Iacoboni aims to help his fellow physicians escape the “suffocating boundaries of mechanism and materialism.” Read More ›
Plato Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date May 17, 2025 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , brain, Brian Miller, chemicals, complexity, David Klinghoffer, Doctor's Diary (series), double helix, egg, embryo, eyes, gene pool, genes, humor, information, intelligent design, Leonardo da Vinci, medicine, piano, Plato, Plato's Revenge, Richard Sternberg, skyscraper, sperm, Stephen Iacoboni, What Darwin Didn’t Know Doctor’s Diary: I Couldn’t Put Plato’s Revenge Down Geoffrey Simmons May 17, 2025 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 I rarely read a book as quickly as I read this text, and I virtually never read a book twice. Read More ›