By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, the Michael Medved Show welcomes Dr. Stephen Meyer to talk about his bestselling book, Darwin’s Doubt: The Explosive Origin of Animal Life and the Case for Intelligent Design (2013). Listen in as Meyer and Medved discuss the mysteries of the Cambrian explosion and why this phenomenon continues to stump Darwinian evolutionists. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Creation Moments Speaking, singing, writing and body language are all familiar ways of communicating. Science has now learned of another means of communication that has been going on all around us, yet we are not even aware of it. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments People and mammals have a multi-pronged immune system. When a bacterial infection is detected, cells begin to release nitric oxide, which kills bacteria, and they begin a cascade of other defense strategies. Ultimately, antibodies that directly attack any invader are produced. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Until recently, it was thought that, excluding mankind, only a few insects, beetles, ants and termites actually farmed crops for their food supply. Then an amazing snail was found. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments The shy bird called Clark’s nutcracker collects food during the growing season and stores it for the cold winter months. In one year, a bird will store between 22,000 and 33,000 seeds in as many as 2,500 locations, which can be more than ten miles apart. But does the little bird remember where he put all those seeds? read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, Sarah Chaffee interviews physician Geoffrey Simmons about eyesight. Simmons discusses the sensitivity of the eyes and how we sense light, and explains how vision displays irreducible complexity. Find out more about the human body in Simmons’ book, What Darwin Didn’t Know. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, David Klinghoffer shares about Tom Wolfe’s new book, which critiques evolutionary explanations for the origin of language. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Creation Moments Everyone will remember those school textbook diagrams showing the ever-upward progression of living organisms, including man. We recall the horse series, found in textbooks and the museum displays showing the evolution of the horse – the first stage as a small mammal and, after several transitions, the modern horse. The claim that fossils in the rock layers show a progression from simple life in the lowest layers to the most complex life at the top accompanies these diagrams. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments With the exception of basic messages such as aggression, communication between two entirely different species has seldom been observed among animals in the wild. We know that many animals among the same species give each other specific warnings about an impending danger. However, scientists have never noted one species recognizing the specific warning given by a second species. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments As science learns more about the universe, some are suggesting that they see basic mathematical principles that underlie everything. This principle, which one scientist has called “cellular automata”, might be at the root of everything from astronomy to zoology. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Normally, the desert locusts mentioned in the Bible are shy and reclusive and are green in color. What turns them into the multi-colored army that sweeps across the land, eating every leaf in sight? read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Visitors to the Grand Canyon will recall the Park Rangers saying that it took millions of years for water to carve out the Canyon. We have looked at examples of rapid canyon formation in previous programs, and today we have one more example. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Multimedia In this episode of ID the Future, Casey Luskin interviews author Felipe Aizpún as they discuss the new volume Charles Darwin Frente Al Diseño Inteligente, a book with contributions in Spanish from various authors critical of Darwinian evolution. Aizpún is a member of the Organización Internacional para el Avance Científico del Diseño Inteligente (OIACDI) and a contributor to the pro-ID Spanish blog, ¿Darwin o DI?. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, John West interviews Bruce Buff about his new novel, The Soul of the Matter, which has intelligent design as its main theme. Here, Buff discusses the plot of the book, his interest in writing, and weaving intelligent design into a thriller. Find out more about the book on ENV. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, Sarah Chaffee interviews Michael Behe on the recent paper and accompanying video on antibiotic resistance published by Science. Behe explains how antibiotic resistance demonstrates loss, not gain, of information. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Creation Moments Almost everyone in the world today knows of the terrible disaster that struck the coasts of South East Asia. The North American news media gave daily body counts, reported human tragedy and inflicted damage … yet, as far as is known, none mentioned the animals. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments There are countless scientific studies designed to find out how diet, environment and our habits influence our health. These studies urged us to eat this, not eat that and generally give up bad habits. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Mention snakes or other crawly reptiles, and people usually shy away. Typically, snakes have a reputation for being dangerous or, at best, completely unable to show affection. New research shows us that in many cases this isn’t true at all. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments How do you get the water you need in a desert in which it almost never rains? We have often looked here at how God’s designs in nature show us practical designs we may never think of. The water-hoarding beetle provides us with one more such example. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Most listeners to these programs will at sometime have visited a museum to see the dinosaurs. Of course, the tangible remains consist of fossil skeletons and, if one is allowed to touch the bones, they are as hard as rock. Sometimes they are actually cement or plaster since they are copies. However, we are told that over the millions of years, the original bone had been replaced by minerals. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, Robert Crowther interviews Dr. Michael Denton about the film Fire-Maker, which is newly available to watch for free on YouTube. Denton discusses how finely-tuned conditions allowing for both combustion and human life fostered development of technology and describes how it is a ‘close call’ that we are even able to make fires. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Creation Moments The history of science, supposedly supporting evolution, shows the power of expecting to find something, whether it exists or not. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Almost everyone in the world today knows of the terrible disaster that struck the coasts of South East Asia. The North American news media gave daily body counts, reported human tragedy and inflicted damage … yet, as far as is known, none mentioned the animals. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments An unusual example of a design in nature that runs counter to human common sense is found in the pectoral flippers of the humpback whale. The leading edge of these flippers, which one would intuitively expect to be smooth, actually sport evenly spaced bumps. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Creation Moments Living fossils are creatures believed to be extinct and known only through the fossil record. The most famous living fossil is the Coelacanth. It is a fish, and textbooks claim it has been extinct for 70 million years according to the evolutionary timetable. Now we know that schools of them live in the Indian Ocean. read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments
By Multimedia On this episode of ID the Future, Andrew McDiarmid narrates the prologue to Stephen Meyer’s Darwin’s Doubt: The Explosion of Animal Life and the Case for Intelligent Design. HarperOne will soon move into production on audiobook versions of Darwin’s Doubt and Signature in the Cell: DNA and the Evidence for Intelligent Design. Your browser does not support playing Audio, please upgrade your browser or find our podcast on podOmatic Download Episode …read more Read more here: id the future
By Creation Moments For thousands of years salt has been considered valuable as a seasoning, a preservative and even as a means of payment. But could salt preserve bacteria alive for thousands or even millions of years? read more …read more Read more here: Creation Moments