jcvi-syn3a-minimal-cell Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 2, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifeScience Reporting Tagged , amino acids, bacteria, bioengineering, biofuels, Brownian motion, cells, chemical reactions, cytoplasm, drugs, evolution, Evolution News, Humpty Dumpty, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, molecular machines, signals, Stanford University, The Design of Life, The New Yorker, William A. Dembski The New Yorker Takes “A Journey to the Center of Our Cells” Casey Luskin March 2, 2022 Biology, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Science Reporting 6 There’s a problem that biologists have long pondered — how do proteins find other proteins within the cell that they are supposed to interact with? Read More ›
Frances Arnold Type post Author Matti Leisola Date October 4, 2018 CategoriesChemistryIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Artificial Selection, bacteria, Barry Hall, bioengineering, biofuels, biotechnology, Caltech, directed evolution, Douglas Axe, enzymes, evolution, Frances Arnold, gene, Heretic, intelligent design, Michael Behe, mutations, natural selection, New York Times, Nobel Prize, pharmaceuticals, proteins, rational design, The Edge of Evolution, theistic evolution How the 2018 Nobel Laureates in Chemistry Harnessed Intelligent Design Matti Leisola October 4, 2018 Chemistry, Intelligent Design 5 There is one point of confusion in descriptions of this year’s prize winners. It’s the talk of “directed evolution.” Read More ›