Cassini-Enceladus-plumes-med Type post Author David Coppedge Date October 18, 2022 CategoriesFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , astrophysicists, coincidences, complex life, earth, Enceladus, geysers, habitable zone, intelligent design, Jupiter, magnetic field, magnetic fields, Mars, Michael Denton, NASA, Neptune, perturbation, plate tectonics, Second Law of Thermodynamics, solar system, The Miracle of Man, thermodynamics, timing, Titan, Uranus Intelligent Design and Planetary Timing David Coppedge October 18, 2022 Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 5 Enceladus is an especially fascinating case. Nearly 100 geysers of water ice are currently jetting out of its south pole at supersonic speed. Read More ›
gorilla Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date June 21, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Adam and Eve, adrenaline, Andromeda galaxy, ankylosing spondylitis, babies, bonobos, Charles Darwin, chimpanzees, comedians, Doctor's Diary (series), evolution, exercise, fish, gorillas, human origins, humor, Immune System, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, laughter, oxygenation, rats, Robin Williams, specified complexity, The New England Journal of Medicine, topoisomerases, UCLA, Uranus Doctor’s Diary: There’s Nothing Funny About Evolution Geoffrey Simmons June 21, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Is a sense of humor a byproduct, an accident, or was it installed on purpose? For better health? There definitely seems to be a purpose. Read More ›
Uranus Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 13, 2022 CategoriesFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , astrobiology, Carl Sagan, Casey Luskin, Common Core, cosmos, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, earth sciences, exoplanets, geologists, Hell, intelligent design, John West, solar system, stars, Uranus Casey Luskin: Questions Across the Cosmos David Klinghoffer June 13, 2022 Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 2 Following his wonderful talk at the Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, geologist Casey Luskin took questions from the audience. Read More ›
Proxima Centauri Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date April 16, 2020 CategoriesPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Abraham Loeb, atmosphere, BIO-Complexity, distance, Hubble Space Telescope, hydrogen, interstellar dust, Milky Way, Neptune, oxygen, rockets, satellite TV, solar system, space travel, super-earths, The Privileged Planet, Uranus Is Space Travel Our Destiny? Guillermo Gonzalez April 16, 2020 Physical Sciences 6 I was motivated to do this study after two papers were published in 2018 on the difficulty of launching rockets from super-earths. Read More ›
New_High-Resolution_Earthrise_Image Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date January 7, 2020 CategoriesPhysical Sciences Tagged , __edited, Apollo 8, beauty, butterflies, Carl Sagan, color, crystals, earth, Earthrise, flowers, Frank Borman, insects, Jim Lovell, Mars, Moon, natural selection, Neptune, peacock, rainbows, sexual selection, solar system, surprise, Uranus, Venus Earth — The Mystery of Our Colorful Home Guillermo Gonzalez January 7, 2020 Physical Sciences 3 Certainly, there is no logical reason why life should be wedded to the transcendental value of beauty. Read More ›