OldBuickcarnearCapitolbuildinginHavannaCuba Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date June 28, 2025 CategoriesArchaeologyArtsEvolutionEvolutionary PsychologyNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abstractions, amphibians, birds, cars, cave bears, cephalopods, driving, fish, Flight, human consciousness, human exceptionalism, natural selection, reptiles, University of Sydney Birds Don’t Drive Buicks Because of … Evolution, You See Denyse O’Leary June 28, 2025 Archaeology, Arts, Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, Neuroscience & Mind 6 This all seems a roundabout way of saying that humans are exceptional. And here’s the question that no one in evolutionary biology has the answer to. Read More ›
driverless car Type post Author David Coppedge Date September 5, 2023 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , "survival of the fittest", abduction, adaptation, CELS, Charles Darwin, Columbia University, Current Biology, equilibrium, Eric Anderson, gravity, Herbert Spencer, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Mars, Mars rovers, molecular machines, New Zealand, planets, PNAS, Science Advances, Second Law of Thermodynamics, selective pressure, software, sponges, TEDx talk, University of Otago, University of Sydney, water What’s Driving Darwin’s Driverless Car? David Coppedge September 5, 2023 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 12 What drives natural selection? Evolutionary forces. What are evolutionary forces? They’re what drive natural selection. Read More ›
University_of_Sydney_Main_Quadrangle Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date July 1, 2019 CategoriesScientific Freedom Tagged , __edited, academic freedom, Australia, culture, Darwinian evolution, evolutionary theory, faculty, free speech, Peter Ridd, students, The Conversation, United States, universities, University of Melbourne, University of Sydney More Victories for Academic Freedom…Down Under Sarah Chaffee July 1, 2019 Scientific Freedom 3 It seems that a movement of support for academic freedom is rising in Australia. I hope it makes its way to the United States. Read More ›
concept of balance and stability Type post Date May 10, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife SciencesScience Tagged , __k-review, astrobiology, David Klinghoffer, Geraint Lewis, intelligent design, Lee Cronin, Mars, SETI, Thomas Nagel, University of Glasgow, University of Sydney, Venus Recognizing Life Is Different from Natural Processes, Science Balances on the Edge of ID Science and Culture May 10, 2017 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Science 7 Scientific materialists must live in a state of cognitive dissonance. Read More ›