man-jump-stockpack-adobe-stock-25996526-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Stuart Burgess Date March 2, 2026 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __featured3, ACL, anatomy, bipedal posture, cross links, cruciate ligaments, engineers, evolutionary theory, flexion, foot, four-bar linkage, hip joint, human knee, intelligent design, joints, knee joint, locking, multifunctioning, Nathan Lents, PCL, poor design, quads, rotation, squatting, standing, strength, tibia The Incredible “Floating” Human Knee Joint Stuart Burgess March 2, 2026 Anatomy, Engineering, Intelligent Design 5 I fully agree with Nathan Lents that the evolutionary paradigm predicts the knee should be a very poor design Read More ›
bare-foot-of-young-woman-walking-at-home-closeup-stockpack-a-500147124-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Stuart Burgess Date February 23, 2026 CategoriesAnatomyIntelligent Design Tagged , anatomy, ankle fusion, ankle performance, apes, arched feet, arches, Arches National Park, Australopithecus afarensis, Carol Ward, cuboid bone, cuneiform bone, D. J. Meldrum, E. E. Sarmiento, Energy, engineering, Ethiopia, fibula, flat feet, foot, Foot and Ankle International, football, fossils, Hadar, Homo sapiens, HOMO: Journal of Comparative Human Biology, human foot, humans, irreducibly complex systems, jig, keystones, lateral arch, linkage system, lower body, Lucy, medial arch, midfoot, Nathan Lents, P. J. Mitchell, Roman arch, shock, squash, talus bone, tibia, Utah Appreciating the Irreducible Complexity of the Human Foot Stuart Burgess February 23, 2026 Anatomy, Intelligent Design 9 In the fossil record there are no transitional forms between the arched feet of humans and the flat feet of apes. Read More ›