Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature

Science and Culture Today | Page 462 | Discovering Design in Nature

baby and father

Parents — Not Bioethicists — Should Decide about Baby’s Life Support

Tinslee Lewis, age 11 months, has a heart defect. The doctors claim the case is hopeless. Read More ›
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How Science Lost Its Mind 

Before Darwin, nearly everyone, in every corner of the world, believed in some type of ‘‘intelligent design,” and the majority still do. Read More ›
Neanderthal

Reflections on Our Ancient Past

I bring this up because some have claimed that I advocate a sole genetic progenitorship model for the first couple. Read More ›
robot
Photo credit: Lenin Estrada via Unsplash.

Dr. Geoffrey Simmons on Human Design — and Re-Creating It in Robots

Will robots ever experience empathy or other feelings, or develop a genuine sense of humor? Read More ›
Antikythera mechanism

DNA of Things: Embedding Machines with Replication Data

In 1901, divers brought up from an ancient shipwreck the first part of the Antikythera mechanism made by Greek inventors. Read More ›
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Dallas Conference Will Unveil Intelligent Design’s Original Edition

How does life emerge from that which is not alive? That mystery has long exercised a peculiar fascination. Read More ›
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Intelligent Design and Intelligent Dieting: New Book by Jay Richards on the Wisdom of Fasting

At a moment’s notice, Darwinists can spin forth a just-so story about the habits of Paleolithic man. With a little imagination, no doubt you could tell such an after-the-fact story yourself. Read More ›
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Nature Reviews Genetics — Pseudogene Function Is “Prematurely Dismissed”

As Seth W. Cheetham and his co-authors put it, biology suffers from “demotivation into exploring pseudogene function by the a priori assumption that they are functionless.” Read More ›
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Earth — The Mystery of Our Colorful Home

Certainly, there is no logical reason why life should be wedded to the transcendental value of beauty. Read More ›
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Meyer on “Nested Coding”: Another Successful Design Prediction

Overlapping genes, or “nested coding,” was anticipated by microbiologist Siegfried Scherer. Read More ›

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