stack-of-educational-journals-and-research-articles-high-qua-862489619-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 18, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLegal Science (jurisprudence)Scientific Reasoning Tagged , __featured3, amicus brief, Annalen der Physik, BioLogos, Cambridge University Press, Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., De Revolutionibus, Discovery Institute, Dover trial, Foundation for Thought and Ethics, Francis Collins, Hans Krebs, Harmut Michel, intelligent design, Iowa State University, John Angus Campbell, Juan Miguel Campanario, Judge John E. Jones, Kitzmiller v. Dover, Michael Behe, Michael J. Berridge, mutations, Nobel Prize, Of Pandas and People, Origin of Species, peer-reviewed journals, peer-reviewed publications, peer-reviewed research, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, protein science, Robert H. Michell, Scott Minnich, Stephen Meyer, Supreme Court, Ten Myths About Dover, The Design Inference, type III secretion system Ten Myths About Dover: No. 3, “Intelligent Design Has No Peer-Reviewed Publications” Casey Luskin December 18, 2025 Intelligent Design, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Scientific Reasoning 19 Unfortunately, Judge Jones got this simple question exactly wrong, giving life to a myth. This alone speaks volumes about his ruling. Read More ›