Stephen_Hawking_at_Kennedy_Space_Center_Shuttle_Landing_Facility_KSC-07pd-0946 Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date September 9, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , alcohol, antibiotics, COVID-19, disease, Doctor's Diary (series), factory, free will, gender dysphoria, intelligent design, measles, mental illness, pollution, pregnancy, Vaccines, vestigial structures, vitamin C, What Darwin Didn’t Know, William A. Dembski Doctor’s Diary: Are Flaws in Our Design Responsible for Bad Things Happening to Good People? Geoffrey Simmons September 9, 2024 Intelligent Design, Medicine 9 When I lecture, I typically discuss intelligent design as if it were a near-perfect process creating inexplicably complicated living entities. Read More ›
Edouard_Manet_-_Basket_of_Fruit_-_Google_Art_Project Type post Author Eric Hedin Date September 4, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , animals, bananas, berries, birds, Cretaceous Period, digestion, dinosaurs, fertilization, flowering plants, foresight, fruit, intelligent design, nutrition, optimization, potassium, seeds, The Privileged Planet, vitamin C Fruit Is Designed for Life Eric Hedin September 4, 2024 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 6 This type of multi-purpose optimization speaks more of intelligent foresight and design than random adaptation. Read More ›
runners Type post Author Marvin Olasky Date January 3, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , babies, baseball, childbirth, conception, evolution, Evolution News, fallopian tube, Howard Glicksman, Human Errors, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, jellyfish, jesus, koalas, legislators, miracles, Nathan Lents, Neo-Darwinism, Steve Laufmann, Stuart Burgess, vitamin C, Your Designed Body Life as a Half-Full Glass Marvin Olasky January 3, 2023 Evolution, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design, Science 5 A 2018 book by biologist Nathan Lents is full of complaints about our bodies. Professor Lents has been answered in detail already. Read More ›
Hippolytus Type post Author Ann Gauger Date November 13, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionLinguisticsReproductive Science Tagged , __k-review, birth, cell biology, disease, DNA, empathy, Euripides, gene, great apes, human body, infants, labor, medicine, molecular biology, mothers, mutations, Nathan Lents, nurse, pelvis, theory of mind, vitamin B12, vitamin C Biologist Nathan Lents: Beauty in Error Ann Gauger November 13, 2018 Evolution, Linguistics, Reproductive Science 4 He has a different take on imperfection, one more optimistic than one might expect from someone who writes about what’s wrong with us. Read More ›
Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date February 13, 2012 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, evolution, intelligent design, junk DNA, peer review, pseudogenes, Research, vitamin C The GULO Pseudogene and Its Implications for Common Descent Jonathan McLatchie February 13, 2012 Evolution, Intelligent Design 1 The GULO pseudogene may or may not turn out to harbor some sort of function. Read More ›
Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date February 12, 2012 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, Darwinian evolution, evolution, Icons of Evolution, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, peppered moth, pseudogenes, vitamin C Revenge of the Peppered Moths? Jonathan Wells February 12, 2012 Evolution 1 British biologists dust off a moth-eaten myth: that peppered moths prove Darwinian evolution. Read More ›