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, mumps, polio, pollution, pregnancy, Rabbi Harold Kushner, rubella, sewage, tetanus, 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, pectin, phytochemicals, potassium, seeds, The Privileged Planet, tomatoes, 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, micronutrients, 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, developing world, disease, DNA, empathy, Euripides, gene, great apes, human body, infants, labor, medicine, molecular biology, mothers, mutations, Nathan Lents, nurse, pelvis, The Human Evolution Blog, 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 ›