TempleofZeusinAthens079 Type post Author Brian Miller Date July 16, 2025 CategoriesBiochemistryOrigin of Life Tagged , amino acids, BioCosmos, biomolecules, building blocks, C. James, cells, diffusion, diffusion coefficient, dipeptide, discovery time, half-life, intelligent agent, intelligent design, James Tour, M. C. Parker, nucleotides, origin of life, peptide bond, physics, proteins, Rice University, RNA, statistical decay theory, thermodynamics, water New Article from James Tour Undermines a Pillar of Origin-of-Life Theories Brian Miller July 16, 2025 Biochemistry, Origin of Life 5 Proteins and RNA degrade at rates that render their spontaneous formation under natural, undirected conditions highly implausible. Read More ›
baby Type post Author Granville Sewell Date May 30, 2025 CategoriesGeneticsMathematicsReproductive Science Tagged , Alexander Tsarias, automobiles, BioCosmos, cars, common sense, David Klinghoffer, duplication errors, grandchildren, information, intelligent design, Levinthal paradox, materialism, Model T, molecular biology, natural selection, Plato, Plato's Revenge, replication, Richard Sternberg, Timaeus, unintelligent forces The Paradox of Biological Reproduction Granville Sewell May 30, 2025 Genetics, Mathematics, Reproductive Science 6 Reproduction poses a difficult paradox for materialistic science despite the fact that we see it happen every day. Read More ›
Chk-UCH1-GFAP-20X-1 Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date February 26, 2025 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , BioCosmos, carbohydrates, cell adhesion, complexity, dGRNs, endoplasmic reticulum, evolution, glycans, glycosylation, glycosyltransferases, Golgi apparatus, intelligent causes, intelligent design, kidney cells, nerve cells, probabilistic resources, proteins, signaling, stochastic processes, University of Georgia New Paper Examines How the Complexity of Glycan Structures Points to Intelligent Design Jonathan McLatchie February 26, 2025 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 "This is, of course, important in order for a kidney cell to be and function as a kidney cell, a nerve cell to function as a nerve cell, and so forth." Read More ›
DNA Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date September 14, 2023 CategoriesBiologyChemistryEvolutionIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , base pairs, Bayesian reasoning, BioCosmos, causal circularity, DNA, first life, intelligent design, Jack Szostak, likelihood ratio, mutations, naturalistic philosophy, proteins, replication fidelity, ribonucleotides, ribozymes, RNA, RNA world, self-replication, Sy Garte, teleology First Life Must Have Had a Minimally Reliable Replication System — A Conundrum for Materialists Jonathan McLatchie September 14, 2023 Biology, Chemistry, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 6 On a design-based view, it is not particularly surprising that the first life would be finely optimized to reduce copying errors. Read More ›
Ford Model T Type post Author Granville Sewell Date July 26, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifeTechnology Tagged , aquatic bladderworts, BioCosmos, Charles Darwin, chemical processes, duplication errors, evolution, Evolution News, Heinz-Albert Becker, intelligent design, irreducibly complex systems, Model T, peer-reviewed literature, replication, self-replicating machines, self-replicators, Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig The Other Unsolved Problem of Evolution Granville Sewell July 26, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Technology 5 "With all our advanced technology, we are not close to producing human-engineered self-replicating machines." Read More ›