Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
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cytoskeleton

012_Wild_Chamois_Riederalp_Photo_by_Giles_Laurent
Photo credit: Giles Laurent, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Why Evolution Struggles to Explain the Transition to Multicellularity

It is as if evolutionary biologists don’t take death into account. All their theories seem to work like magic. Read More ›
Erika1
Image source: YouTube (cropped).

Why Their Separate Ancestry Model Is “Wildly Unrealistic”

On Monday, I will look at the consistency of the phylogenetically informative sites for the Baum et al. (2016) paper. Spoiler alert: It looks like design. Read More ›
meiosis
Image credit: Colin Behrens, via Pixabay.

DNA May Be “Junk” at One Level But of Utmost Significance at Another

It is during the latter stages of the production of an animal oocyte that many functionalities of what some disparage as “junk DNA” take center stage. Read More ›
diatoms

Foresight in Single Cells

There are things going on in cells that make sense only if a designing intelligence saw a need and planned for it in advance. Read More ›
electric cell

Welcome to the Electric Cell

Chemical signaling in the cell is fairly well known, but what about electrical signaling? Is a cell wired like an electrical network? Read More ›
spermatogenesis

Importance of Centrobin in Sperm Development — Another Stumbling Block for Darwinism

“If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications...” Read More ›
3.7.2018--Fashion Promos 2018-- Photos by Joe Angeles/WUSTL Photos
3.7.2018--Fashion Promos 2018-- Photos by Joe Angeles/WUSTL Photos

Researchers Find that in Cells, Trains Run on Time

Man-made railways can’t come close to the efficiency and flexibility of those at work inside your body right now. Read More ›
mitosis

Biologist Scott Turner’s Purpose and Desire, In His Own Words

If Turner is right, the clockwork, mechanistic, DNA-centric model may have met its match. Read More ›

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