ID the Future Intelligent Design, Evolution, and Science Podcast

You searched for michael denton

Search Results

IDTF-thumbnail
IDTF-thumbnail

How Water’s Chemistry Helps Make Life on Earth Possible

On this episode of ID The Future, we bring you a clip from the documentary Privileged Species a clip arguing that water possesses many unique properties that appear finely tuned to allow for life on Earth. The excerpt dips a toe into what biologist Michael Denton explores in much greater depth in his latest book, The Wonder of Water.

Read More ›
reflection-in-water-ripples-stockpack-adobe-stock.jpg
reflection in water ripples
Image Credit: Oleksii Sergieiev - Adobe Stock

A Doc Looks at Why Water is Important for Human Life

On this episode of ID the Future, to celebrate Michael Denton’s newest book, The Wonder of Water, we bring you a conversation between Ray Bohlin and Howard Glicksman on the body’s wondrous control systems for using water. Dr. Glicksman is a medical doctor and author of an extended series of posts at Evolution News & Science Today, “The Designed Body.”

IDTF-thumbnail
IDTF-thumbnail

Listen to Clip from New Short Documentary, The Biology of the Baroque

On this episode of ID the Future, we feature a short clip from The Biology of the Baroque: The Mystery of Non-Adaptive Order. This documentary is based on a novel and incisive argument from Discovery Institute biologist Michael Denton, in his new book, Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis. Evolutionists have good reason for demanding that we avert our eyes from biology’s delicate artfulness. None of that, after all, is explicable in light of the Darwinian theory that natural selection retains only what is useful from a “technical standpoint” of reproductive success. In the book and the video, Dr. Denton puts this quality of superfluous, luxurious “non-adaptive order” front and center.

Read More ›
IDTF-thumbnail
IDTF-thumbnail

Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis – Special Preview

Biologist Michael Denton published the groundbreaking Evolution: A Theory in Crisis more than 30 years ago. On this episode of ID the Future, we will be giving you a special preview of biologist Michael Denton’s new book, Evolution: Still a Theory in Crisis, and hearing from Denton and biochemist Michael Behe.

Read More ›
professional-heavy-industry-engineerworker-wearing-safety-un-398219280-stockpack-adobe_stock
Professional Heavy Industry Engineer/Worker Wearing Safety Uniform and Hard Hat Uses Tablet Computer. Serious Successful Female Industrial Specialist Walking in a Metal Manufacture Warehouse.
Image Credit: Gorodenkoff - Adobe Stock

Engineered Elegance: The Checkpoint Pathways of the Cell Cycle

One of the most incredible features of cellular life is the capability of self-replication. And built into the remarkable process of cell division are several checkpoints that ensure the success of this life or death cellular practice. But can a Darwinian mechanism take the credit for this elegant cellular system? On this ID The Future, host Andrew McDiarmid continues his four-part conversation with Dr. Jonathan McLatchie on the intelligent design and irreducible complexity of eukaryotic cell division. In this segment, Dr. McLatchie describes each checkpoint and the role it plays in successful self-replication. This is Part 3 of a four-part series. Read More ›
3d-rendered-illustration-of-a-motor-protein-stockpack-adobe-230402435-stockpack-adobe_stock
3d rendered illustration of a motor protein
Image Credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki - Adobe Stock

McLatchie: How Motor Proteins Power Eukaryotic Cell Division

Could the components of the eukaryotic cell division process have arisen through a gradual, unguided process? On this ID The Future, Dr. Jonathan McLatchie casts light on the unlikelihood of this proposition as he continues a four-episode series with host Andrew McDiarmid on the intelligent design and irreducible complexity of eukaryotic cell division. In this segment, McLatchie dives into some of the key molecular machinery responsible for the success of mitosis: the mitotic spindle and the motor proteins that aid in its assembly and function, explaining why their origin is beyond the reach of a Darwinian process. Read More ›