VIEW HEADLINES ONLY

How a Cell Prepares for Division

At this scale, the cell does not appear to be reacting. It appears to be operating with a framework in which structure, timing, and function are tightly integrated.

Evidence for Easter Shown on Film

Easter is more than eggs, bunnies and springtime. But can thinking people believe Jesus rose from the dead?

The Mathematics of Good Friday

In this Illustra video of a true story, the numbers turn an atheist to faith in Jesus Christ.

Genes Tell Time with Help from ‘Junk’ DNA

We don't sense time as an external arrival. We inhabit it as an internal necessity.

New Guide to Human Evolution: Survival of the Wittiest

Think of how many lives could have been saved by realizing that evolution succeeds with humor.

Early Diversity of Rediscovered ‘Sea Monsters’ Surprises Scientists

Paleontologists find ‘evidence of a surprisingly diverse community of early ocean predators’, challenging simplistic evolutionary narratives.

Hidden Force that Helps Wire the Brain Revealed

This discovery is so significant that it represents a “paradigm shift” in neurobiology—one that may require textbooks to be rewritten.

How to Unmask the “Convergent Evolution” Magic Trick

Convergence is an evasive, circular term for Darwinians who are surprised by unrelated similarities.

Beetles and Elderberries Show a Beautiful Symbiotic Balance

A delicate partnership between elderberries and beetles is described that balances the needs of both organisms.

Design in Earth’s Weather Systems

Explore how meteorology as a scientific pursuit testifies to the existence of the Creator God.

Gut Wisdom: Proteins on Patrol

Scientists find a protein in the human gut that actively fights even antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

The Wonder of Life in Earth’s Driest Places

The world’s driest non-polar desert is more hospitable than space. Evolutionists view organismal adaptation as evidence for macroevolution, but is this a valid notion?

Keeping Titan Old Despite Evidence of Youth

Saturn's giant moon is having trouble conforming to consensus beliefs in billions of years.

Cells Use ‘Disordered’ Proteins to Control Access to the Nucleus

Scientists watching the nuclear pore in action discover that its moving protein filaments form a highly selective traffic control system.

There Is No Such Thing as Evolutionary Creativity

We need schoolteachers armed with red pens to strike out the made-up phrases Darwinists use.
All Posts by Date
[archives type="yearly" cat_id="2"]