image Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date August 13, 2025 CategoriesArtsIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , animals, brain, brain activity, Bridget Queenan, Christof Koch, consciousness, human exceptionalism, immaterial reality, language, materialism, Michael Egnor, Michael Gazzaniga, mind, music, rats, Roger Sperry, signal systems, soul, spirit, split-brain patients, volume Missing Brains and the “Music Model” of Consciousness Denyse O’Leary August 13, 2025 Arts, Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind 7 Gazzaniga and Queenan’s new model accounts for missing brain parts but it leaves out the very thing that creates the music. Read More ›
Eurasian-spoonbill Type post Author David Coppedge Date April 30, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , Alistair Evans, Animal Algorithms, bird beaks, Current Biology, David Klinghoffer, eagle, enthalpy, entropy, eukaryotes, evolutionary biologists, Evolutionary Game Theory, godwit, Gutenberg University, humidity, John Harte, Kathleen Garland, mice, Monash University, Murphy’s Laws of Technology, ostrich, phase transition, photosynthesis, physics, physics envy, Plato's Revenge, pressure, Richard Sternberg, spoonbill, teleology, temperature, The Conversation, volume, Weasel program Physics Envy Is Not Helping Evolutionary Biology David Coppedge April 30, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Physics 11 Biology is very different from physics. But if living things are entirely describable by atoms and forces, shouldn’t laws of physics apply to them, too? Read More ›