Charles Darwin Type post Author Robert F. Shedinger Date May 12, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , A Christmas Carol, A Voice in the Wilderness, academia, African Americans, anti-racism, atheism, BioLogos, Charles Darwin, Charles Dickens, Charles Lyell, Crustacea, evolution, evolutionary biology, Francis Collins, history, Human Zoos, John West, Joseph L. Graves Jr., Kool-Aid, Louis Agassiz, Racism, The Voyage of the Beagle, theistic evolution, Victorian England, Yale University Joseph L. Graves as the “Black Darwin”? Think Again Robert Shedinger May 12, 2023 Bioethics, Evolution 7 Darwin could never be considered the kind of anti-racist activist Graves makes him out to be. Read More ›
Origin_of_Life_-_Dark_Ride_-_Science_Exploration_Hall_-_Science_City_-_Kolkata_2016-02-22_0315 Type post Author Brian Miller Date May 5, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMathematicsOrigin of Life Tagged , A Christmas Carol, ATP synthase, Charles Dickens, chemical bonds, chemists, DNA, early Earth, energy production, entropy, enzymes, fluctuation theorems, free energy, genome, India, Inference (journal), information, information processing, James Tour, Jeremy England, media, MIT, molecular machines, molecules, nanotechnology, natural processes, physicists, ribozymes, self-replication, The Mystery of Life’s Origin Inference Article Demonstrates Implausibility of Natural Processes for Explaining the Origin of Life Brian Miller May 5, 2020 Intelligent Design, Mathematics, Origin of Life 8 The piece is highly technical and mathematical, but the basic argument can be quickly summarized with only a marginal loss of technical accuracy. Read More ›