> Michael Behe
> William Dembski
> Guillermo Gonzalez
> Steve Meyer
> Paul Nelson
> Jay Richards
> Jonathan Wells
> Jonathan Witt



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> Rodney LeVake: Expelled Science Teacher, Part 1
> Biomimetics and the Positive Implications for Intelligent Design
> New Peer-Reviewed Paper Demolishes Fallacious Objection to ID
> Academic Freedom Update: California Science Center Engaged in Illegal Cover-Up
> 200 Years After Darwin -- What Didn't Darwin Know?
> Why Consensus Doesn't Count
> Scientocracy Rules
> Information Theory: George Gilder at Bar-Ilan University
> The Design of Life: What the Evidence of Biological Systems Reveals
> Has the U.S. Supreme Court Sanctioned Critique of Darwinism?

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« New Peer-Reviewed Paper Demolishes Fallacious Objection to ID | Main | Rodney LeVake: Expelled Science Teacher, Part 1 »

Biomimetics and the Positive Implications for Intelligent Design

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On this episode of ID the Future, Casey Luskin looks at Biomimetics, a new movement in science that adapts designs from nature to solve problems in engineering, materials science, medicine, and other fields. While engineers and other researchers turn to nature for guidance and inspiration in producing human technology, the positive implications for intelligent design grow. Should scientists consider the possibility that biological systems, which outperform human technology, were intelligently designed? Listen in and find out.

For more information on Biomimetics, check out Biologic Institute's blog here.

For the National Geographic article Luskin cites, click here.

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