axolotl Type post Date October 19, 2020 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , 3D printing, amoeba, beetles, chick, crabs, Darwinism, Douglas Axe, embryonic development, eukaryotes, evolution, functional whole, Harvard University, Hydra, Illustra Media, information, Information Technology, intelligent design, liver, Michael Levin, morphogenesis, octopuses, paramecium, Stentor, The Scientist, Tufts University, Undeniable (book), Wyss Institute Morphogenesis: Coding for Shape Science and Culture October 19, 2020 Anatomy, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 How do you get a 3-D shape from a linear code? That is the puzzle of morphogenesis. Read More ›
BioBits-Thumbnail-Option-8 Type post Date August 16, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringScience Education Tagged , __k-review, Biomimetics, coding, computer science, Darwinism, DNA, education, evolution, Harvard University, intelligent design, mutations, natural selection, Next Generation Science Standards, Northwestern University, protein synthesis, proteins, public education, schools, Science Advances, Science Education Policy, stem, synthetic biology, transcription, translation, Wyss Institute Biomimetics Moves STEM Education in an Intriguing Direction Science and Culture August 16, 2018 Biology, Engineering, Science Education 8 An initiative by a major biomimetics lab to prepare students for careers in STEM introduces them to biological coding. Read More ›