gymnastics Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date March 16, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Andrew McDiarmid, circulatory system, complexity, connective tissue, evolutionary mechanisms, intelligent design, Jonathan McLatchie, Michael Behe, muscle contraction, muscle fibers, muscles, nervous system, respiratory system, skeletal system, tendons The Incredible Design of Muscles Andrew McDiarmid March 16, 2024 Biochemistry, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 To understand the limitations of evolutionary mechanisms, we have to “bite the bullet of complexity,” as biochemist Michael Behe writes. Read More ›
ear Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date December 7, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , cells, cochlea, eardrum, hearing, Howard Glicksman, human body, incus, inner ear, inner ear canals, intelligent design, malleus, middle ear, nerve impulses, Organ of Corti, outer ear, pinna, pitch, Steve Laufmann, tendons, tympanic membrane, Your Designed Body Your Designed Body: Hearing Is a Symphony of Parts Howard Glicksman and Steve Laufmann December 7, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 The human ear can detect sound when the eardrum is displaced by as little as one-tenth the diameter of a single hydrogen atom. Read More ›
African savannah in Serengeti Type post Author Olufemi Oluniyi Date June 13, 2019 CategoriesHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __k-review, Africa, brain, colonialism, cosmic rays, Evolution News, functionality, human origins, Human Zoos, Ian Sample, ligaments, Milky Way, muscles, nerves, Nigeria, Olufemi Oluniyi, pseudoscience, Social Darwinism, supernova, tendons, The Guardian, witch doctor Upright Walking and African Witch Doctors Olufemi Oluniyi June 13, 2019 Human Origins and Anthropology 4 In seeking to explain what makes humans exceptional, current evolutionists convert guesswork into a methodology, as humans did for long ages in the pre-scientific past. Read More ›
Gray220 2 Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date June 18, 2018 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, "God of the gaps", "poor design", bones, cartilage, constraints, Darwinists, Douglas Axe, evolution, global warming, Günter Bechly, human body, Human Errors, intelligent design, ligaments, Michael Behe, Nathan Lents, Neo-Darwinism, nuclear war, physiology, Royal Society, Scott Minnich, tendons, Wall Street Journal, War and Peace, wrist The “Botched” Human Body, Revisited Steve Laufmann June 18, 2018 Anatomy, Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 11 As a systems architect, I’ve spent decades designing and implementing large and complex systems of information systems. Read More ›
tendons Type post Date March 26, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, basketball, bone, brain, Canada, collagen, design constraint, eyes, Howard Glicksman, Irreducible Complexity, macroscale, molecular machines, Nanoscale, piano, running, Scientific Reports, tendons, tissue, walking Tendons Are Irreducibly Complex Science and Culture March 26, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 A simple tissue we take for granted turns out to represent another example of irreducible complexity in the human body. Read More ›
ostrich Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date September 8, 2017 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, __nedited, Darwinism, evolution, intelligent design, mystery, ostrich, ratites, running, species, tendons Ostrich Kneecaps — Another Enduring Mystery for Darwinism Cornelius Hunter September 8, 2017 Biology, Intelligent Design 1 We can only say that so it is. Read More ›