bored students Type post Author Tom Gilson Date March 4, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignScience EducationTechnology Tagged , cell membrane, cell walls, Charles Darwin, computers, Discovery Institute, high school, Howard Glicksman, ID the Future, intelligent design, Lex Luthor, mitochondria, molecular machines, nanomachines, nucleus, organelles, oxygen, podcasts, protoplasm, Superman, teachers, The Stream, Veritasium Why High School Biology Made Me Angry (And Why I Like It So Much Better Now) Tom Gilson March 4, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Science Education, Technology 9 Your own body has something like 30 trillion cells in it. That’s 30 trillion large cities’ worth of complexity. Read More ›
C. S. Lewis Type post Author Michael D. Aeschliman Date August 16, 2020 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , Abraham Lincoln, Aldous Huxley, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Alfred North Whitehead, Bertrand Russell, Brave New World, Clarence Darrow, Dante, Darwinian theory, David Hume, Deborah Blum, Frederick Douglass, Friedrich Nietzsche, From Darwin to Hitler, Fyodor Dostoevsky, G.K. Chesterton, Ghost Hunters, J. D. Bernal, J.B.S. Haldane, Jacques Maritain, Jane Austen, John Dewey, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Lord Acton, Malcolm Muggeridge, Marquis de Sade, Marxists, Michael Polanyi, Pierre Duhem, Samuel Johnson, Social Darwinism, Stanley L. Jaki, Superman, T.S. Eliot, That Hideous Strength, The Odyssey, Thomas Carlyle, William Jennings Bryan, William Shakespeare, Yuval Harari That Hideous Strength — C. S. Lewis’s Fantasia of Consciousness at 75 Michael D. Aeschliman August 16, 2020 Bioethics 14 The novel is a narrative, fictional version of a philosophical anatomy of the satanic dimension and implication of much modern history from 1914 onwards. Read More ›
first-responders Type post Date October 1, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, biochemists, bioRxiv, central dogma, ENCODE, functionality, genetic code, heterogeneity, histone code, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, polypeptides, superheroes, Superman, University of Washington Researchers Spot a New Code in Disordered Proteins Science and Culture October 1, 2019 Intelligent Design 10 The scientists call heat shock proteins “nature’s ‘first responders’ to cellular stress.” Read More ›