Long-Story Type post Author Casey Luskin Date March 28, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , BioEssays, biologists, Carmen Sapienza, Columbia University, DNA, ENCODE, evolution, evolutionary biologists, Forrest Mims, Francis Crick, Genome Biology and Evolution, genomes, intelligent design, John Bodnar, John Mattick, Jonathan Wells, Journal of Human Evolution, junk DNA, Laurence Moran, Living with Darwin, Long Story Short, Nature (journal), Nature Methods, Oxford University Press, paradigm shift, Philip Kitcher, predictions, Richard Dawkins, Scientific American, Taylor & Francis, The Greatest Show on Earth, University of Toronto, W. Ford Doolittle, What’s in Your Genome, William A. Dembski New Long Story Video Tackles “A Battle of Predictions: Junk DNA” Casey Luskin March 28, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 Something happened in 2012 that changed the entire debate in favor of the ID-based prediction that DNA would be largely functional. Read More ›
1280px-Drosophila_melanogaster_Proboscis-1 Type post Author Richard Sternberg Date April 3, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionGenetics Tagged , __k-review, axioms, Carmen Sapienza, chromosomes, DNA, Drosophila melanogaster, euchromatin, Francis Crick, fruit flies, heterochromatin, junk DNA, Leslie Orgel, nucleus, organism, phenotype, repetitive sequences, Richard Dawkins, RNA, The Selfish Gene, transposable elements, W. Ford Doolittle, Y chromosome The “Why” of the Fly “Y”: Reflections on “Junk” DNA Richard Sternberg April 3, 2020 Evolution, Genetics 7 Let us give some thought to the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster, that engaging fly which is the bond-servant of genetics. Read More ›