Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date April 26, 2016 CategoriesBioethicsSociologyTechnology Tagged , __tedited, anarchy, anti-human, anti-human exceptionalism, anti-humanism, biology, biotechnology, brain implant, change, conservatism, CRISPR, cybernetics, cyborgs, disguised religion, divine, equality, fascism, Futurism, gene editing, gods, human dignity, human evolution, Internet, microchips, modern times, nuclear weapons, radicalism, robotics, scientism, sexual ethics, superheroes, technology, transhumanism, Zoltan Istvan Transhumanists Want to Be Gods Wesley J. Smith April 26, 2016 Bioethics, Sociology, Technology 4 It is always fun to see what our resident technology-worshipping religious fanatics are up to. Read More ›
in-silico-drug-modeling-with-3d-molecule-visualisation-on-co-1064730310-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 31, 2009 CategoriesComputational SciencesEvolution Tagged , __nedited, active information, avida, Conservation of Information, cybernetics, evolutionary informatics, Evolutionary Informatics Lab, Robert J. Marks II, science, search, target, William A. Dembski Winston Ewert, William Dembski, and Robert Marks Publish Mainstream Scientific Paper Exposing Flaws in Avida Evolution Simulation Casey Luskin December 31, 2009 Computational Sciences, Evolution 3 Darwinian evolution has no prior knowledge about the search target, but Avida's programmers have intelligently designed Avida by smuggling in "active information." Read More ›
colorful-file-folders-and-books-on-shelves-in-office-stockpa-1274662276-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 30, 2009 CategoriesComputational SciencesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __nedited, active information, Conservation of Information, cybernetics, Evolutionary Informatics Lab, No Free Lunch, No Free Lunch theorems, peer-reviewed, Principle of Insufficient Reason, Robert J. Marks II, search, William A. Dembski William Dembski and Robert Marks Publish Mainstream Scientific Paper on Conservation of Information Casey Luskin December 30, 2009 Computational Sciences, Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 Is there a "magic bullet" mechanism by which blind and unguided search engines can find rare, isolated targets? Read More ›