Cell_division.tif Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date November 26, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , anaphase, ATPase, BIO-Complexity, cell division, centromere, checkpoints, chromosome, dynein, eukaryotic cell cycle, eukaryotic cell division, foresight, Irreducible Complexity, kinesin, kinetochore, metaphase, microtubules, mitosis, mitotic cell division, motor proteins, protein complexes, proteins The Eukaryotic Cell Cycle: An Irreducibly Complex System Jonathan McLatchie November 26, 2024 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design 12 Any system that achieves a complex higher-level objective by means of various well-matched interacting components requires foresight to come about. Read More ›
2560px-Spiny-cheeked_Honeyeater_3434_-_Patchewollock_Conservation_Reserve Type post Author Casey Luskin Date August 21, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , ATPase, common descent, convergent evolution, DNA, evolution, India, James Shapiro, Lee Spetner, Madagascar, monarch butterfly, natural genetic engineering, neo-Darwinian mechanisms, neo-Darwinian theory, Not by Chance, sound waves, The Evolution Revolution Lee Spetner’s Nonrandom Evolutionary Hypothesis Casey Luskin August 21, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 We were saddened to learn of the passing of Lee Spetner, MIT-trained physicist. Dr. Spetner was 91 years old and lived in Jerusalem. Read More ›
spiral staircase Type post Date August 29, 2019 CategoriesBiochemistryIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, amino acids, ATP synthase, ATPase, bacterial flagellum, cryo-electron microscopy, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Black Box, Darwinian mechanism, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, kinesin, Michael Behe, molecular motor, peptide bond, proteins, Richard Dawkins, Science (journal), ubiquitin Molecular Motor Threads a Spiral Staircase Science and Culture August 29, 2019 Biochemistry, Intelligent Design 11 Get acquainted with another irreducibly complex molecular motor. This one is a master at unfolding proteins. Its method is ingenious. Read More ›