polar bear Type post Author Eric Cassell Date December 16, 2021 CategoriesBotanyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , "poor design", adaptation, animals, behavior, biosphere, blind evolution, brown bears, Charles Darwin, convergence, dysteleology, evolution, homology, intelligent design, junk DNA, Life Sciences, microevolution, polar bears, Systems Biology, The Design Revolution, vestigial structures, William A. Dembski, William Paley Complex Programmed Behaviors — Intelligently Designed Eric Cassell December 16, 2021 Botany, Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Some discriminators don’t get us very far in deciding which is the better explanation between blind evolution and intelligent design. Read More ›
bacteria Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 13, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionMathematics Tagged , adaptation, bacteria, Biola University, brown bears, Darwinists, Douglas Axe, homeschoolers, intelligent design, lectures, molecular biologists, new-Darwinism, quizzes, unguided evolution Axe: Why Darwinists Hope You Don’t Know Math David Klinghoffer May 13, 2021 Evolution, Mathematics 2 Mathematics has been at the foundation of modern challenges to neo-Darwinism, while those challenges are met mostly with handwaving. Read More ›
climbing-Everest Type post Date May 25, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , altitude, brown bears, climbing, Darwin Devolves, Darwinism, evolution, genes, genetic information, genome, hemoglobin, Himalayas, loss of function, Michael Behe, Mount Everest, mount improbable, natural selection, oxygen, PNAS, polar bears, positive selection, Tibetans, Wikipedia Behe Vindicated Again: Sherpas Climb Everest Easier, Because Darwin Devolves Science and Culture May 25, 2020 Evolution 10 How can Tibetans survive high altitudes that leave lowlanders gasping? The answer is found in broken genes. Read More ›
polar bear Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 6, 2019 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, APOB, Arthur Hunt, atherosclerosis, blubber, brown bears, Cell (journal), cholesterol, Darwin Devolves, devolution, evolution, fat metabolism, high fat diet, Liu et al. (2014), mice, Michael Behe, mutations, Nathan Lents, Nature Reviews Genetics, New Scientist, Polar Bear Seminar, polar bears, PolyPhen-2, Richard Lenski, S. Joshua Swamidass, Shiping Liu Polar Bear Seminar: New Evidence That Michael Behe Is Right Casey Luskin May 6, 2019 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 30 Many studies show that degradative mutations in APOB cause decreased cholesterol. Read More ›