As I was preparing this post, I noticed that I had earlier posted two other pictures of painted turtles. In 2015, I displayed a handful sunbathing on a log. The 2010 picture of the underside of the turtle, which shows why they are called “painted,” must have disappeared during the Great Server Crash. I allowed someone to post it in Wikipedia, and you can see it here if you are so inclined.
A rural scene in upstate New York taken with a pinhole camera. The photograph was exposed in about 1972 using a Praktiflex FX with a set of extension tubes and Kodak Tri-X film. The depth of field is virtually infinite, which is to say equally poor at all object distances.
Today is World Pinhole Camera Day, a fact I just learned on NPR yesterday morning. Which is somewhat surprising, because years ago I did some original research on the pinhole camera. Below the fold,…
Calypte anna – Anna's hummingbird, dining on aloe flowers. Pierce Dayton is the grandson of Vivian Dullien, whose photographs we posted here and here. He took the picture with his cell phone. More below the fold. (Added 4/17/26: Apparently it is an Allen's hummingbird; see the comments by John Harshman and others.)
Finally, we will get to hear how and why these folks' views
differ from each other, and whether they can all
be right. Photos all from Wikimedia. I would be happy to
add photos of the other 6 folks if they give permission.
Today, April 1, the Discovery Institute’s “Science and
Culture Today” site will host a number of debates
between leading figures in the Intelligent Design
movement, highlighting their diverse perspectives,
filling in the missing steps in their previous
arguments,
and giving an opportunity for readers of that site to
leave comments on those posts, comments that will be
as lively, instructive and stimulating as comments
there usually are:
William Dembski, Winston Ewert, Robert Marks, and
George Montañez will explain how having a large
value of their Algorithmically Specified Complexity
measure cannot have happened by
natural selection making the value gradually larger.
And why high functional information requires that
the “description” of the phenotype (or is it genotype?)
needs to be short.
Eric Hedin and Granville Sewell will explain what
law of physics prevents any favorable mutation that
improves functional information from increasing in
frequency in any population.
Casey Luskin and Michael Behe will debate whether
or not there is good evidence for common ancestry of primates,
common ancestry of cercopithecoid monkeys, and common
ancestry of apes (including humans).
John West and David Klinghoffer will explain why
any scientific result that seems to them to make
organisms behave immorally must therefore be scientifically invalid.
These discussions will be accompanied, as usual, by
comments supplied by the enthusiastic and knowledgable
S&CT readers, who appreciate the lively, honest and
informative back-and-forth that signals
the intellectual vitality of the “cdesign proponensist” movement.
Family Trochilidae – hummingbirds; specifically, left to right, a rufous hummingbird, Selasphorus rufus, facing an Anna's hummingbird, Calypte anna, from Dr. Dullien's February birding trip to Arizona. See her entry two weeks ago for more.