Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 344 | Discovering Design in Nature

Darioconusauricomusshell_large
Photo credit: Casey Luskin.

Honoring Richard Lewontin, Famed Evolutionary Biologist and Sometime Critic of His Own Field

The quote for which Lewontin has become best known appeared in his 1997 review of a book by Carl Sagan. Read More ›
Richard Lewontin
Photo: Richard Lewontin, via EurekAlert! No usage restrictions.

Richard Lewontin (1929-2021), Mensch

As I stood by the lab doorway, Lewontin — who was sitting right down front — looked back towards the door and caught my eye. Read More ›
genie
Image credit: simisi1 via Pixabay.

Darwin’s Genie: Misapplied Natural Selection Continues

“Natural selection” is like a Swiss Army knife that researchers in widely different disciplines use to solve their problems. Read More ›
frog
Photo credit: Stephanie LeBlanc, via Unsplash.

Biological Information Beyond DNA: The Future of Biology

Previously, Dr. Wells showed that embryo development requires information carried by membrane patterns in embryonic cells. Read More ›
Jefferson Memorial
truths
Photo credit: Jefferson Memorial © romanslavik.com — stock.adobe.com.

Thomas Jefferson’s Embrace of Intelligent Design

On Independence Day, it is appropriate to review the sources of our rights as citizens. Read More ›
electricity

Biological Information Beyond DNA: The Bioelectric Code

Jonathan Wells explains how biological information is carried in the form of a bioelectric code, and how it differs from the information in DNA. Read More ›
sugar
Photo credit: Sharon McCutcheon on Unsplash.

Biological Information Beyond DNA: The Sugar Code

Biologist Jonathan Wells discusses the “sugar code,” a non-DNA form of information that is determined by patterns of sugar molecules on membrane surfaces. Read More ›
brain
Photo credit: David Matos via Unsplash.

Egnor Debates Materialism with Philosopher of Science David Papineau

Egnor: “Do you want me to explain Thomistic dualism to you?...David, do you not know how St. Thomas explained intentionality?” Papineau: “Uh, no.” Read More ›
three-spine sticklebacks
Image: Three-spine stickleback, by Alexander Francis Lydon, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

Recasting Darwin Stories into Engineering Models

Darwin gets credit by default for changes in organisms that should be seen instead as engineered products of foresight. Read More ›

© Discovery Institute