the-crumbling-foundation-of-the-house-exposed-house-foundati-1408367402-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Brian Miller Date December 31, 2018 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, "survival of the fittest", ALX1, bacteria, cichlid fishes, citrate, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Finches, Darwinian evolution, devolution, evolution, fiber optic cables, First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, genes, Human Errors, intelligent design, Lake Victoria, Michael Behe, Nathan Lents, natural selection, oxygen, Peaceful Science, Richard Lenski #2 of Our Top Stories of 2018: Behe’s Darwin Devolves Topples Foundational Claim of Evolution Brian Miller December 31, 2018 Evolution 8 The evidence commonly cited to argue for evolution’s ability to drive large-scale transformations is almost always circular. Read More ›
toppling Type post Author Brian Miller Date November 21, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, "survival of the fittest", ALX1, bacteria, cichlid fishes, citrate, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Finches, Darwinian evolution, devolution, evolution, fiber optic cables, First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, genes, Human Errors, intelligent design, Lake Victoria, Michael Behe, Nathan Lents, natural selection, oxygen, Peaceful Science, Richard Lenski Michael Behe’s Darwin Devolves Topples Foundational Claim of Evolutionary Theory Brian Miller November 21, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 I saw that biologist Nathan Lents says that he has been asked to review Mike Behe’s new book. Read More ›
1280px-E_coli_at_10000x,_original Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 29, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, bacteria, biomolecules, citrate, Darwin's Black Box, Darwinists, E. coli, evolution, Frances Arnold, function, gene, George P. Smith, Gregory P. Winter, intelligent design, intelligent evolution, loss of function, Michael Behe, Nobel Prize, oxygen, proteins, Richard Lenski, Scott Minnich, The Edge of Evolution The Nobel Prize and Intelligent Evolution Michael Egnor October 29, 2018 Intelligent Design 4 The contrast between the evolutionary sterility of Lenski’s unintelligent Darwinian evolution and the evolutionary potency of Arnold, Smith, and Winter’s intelligent evolution is striking. Read More ›
IMG_1089 Type post Date April 26, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __nedited, algorithms, avida, bacteria, bones, bugs, citrate, compatibilism, computer, creativity, determinism, evolution, free will, intelligent design, libertarian free will, Michael Behe, muscles, Richard Lenski, Robert J. Marks II, simulation, software, The Matrix, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert Digital Evolution and Bohemian Bugs April 26, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 All software engineers have been burnt by those sneaky “bugs” that manage to get past the defenses. Read More ›
Four-Horsemen Type post Author Brian Miller Date April 12, 2018 CategoriesChemistryIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , __k-review, ADP, Arthur Hunt, ATP, citrate, Dennis Venema, Douglas Axe, enzyme, Journal of Molecular Biology, Keith Fox, proteins, Sapientia, tRNA, Undeniable (book), yeast Protein Folding and the Four Horsemen of the Axocalypse Brian Miller April 12, 2018 Chemistry, Intelligent Design, Physics 12 A recent series of critiques, published by the online journal Sapientia, was aimed at Doug Axe’s book, Undeniable. Read More ›
Type post Author Michael Behe Date May 12, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsScience Reporting Tagged , __tedited, adaptive mutations, Barry Hall, citrate, contingency, dishonesty, E. coli, Elizabeth Pennisi, epigenetic change, genetic changes, hype, loss-of-function mutations, LTEE, media, motivated reasoning, peer review, public opinion, Richard Lenski, science journalism, Science News, science reporting, Scott Minnich, speciation Richard Lenski and Citrate Hype — Now Deflated Michael Behe May 12, 2016 Evolution, Genetics, Science Reporting 8 For more than 25 years, Lenski's lab has grown a dozen lines of the bacterium E. coli in small culture flasks. Read More ›