Eugenie Scott Type post Author Casey Luskin Date January 20, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , American Museum of Natural History, creationists, Darwinists, Developmental Cell, Dover trial, Eugenie Scott, evolution, Genome Biology and Evolution, HBBP1, intelligent design, Kenneth Miller, Leakey Foundation, mutations, pseudogenes, purifying selection Blast from the Past: Eugenie Scott’s Failed Prediction on Pseudogenes Casey Luskin January 20, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 Scott confidently asserts that because of mutations the beta-globin pseudogene “isn’t going to do diddly. It’s just going to sit there.” Read More ›
Single-two-cell-mouse-embryos-with-nuclear-LINE1-RNA-labeled-magenta-Credit-Ramalho-Santos-lab_1 Type post Date July 10, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Arabidopsis, Barbara McClintock, Cell (journal), coding, David Klinghoffer, Developmental Cell, ENCODE, epigenetics, genes, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, Kevin Laland, proteins, pseudogenes, RNA, Science (journal), The Myth of Junk DNA, transposons, UC San Francisco As Research Advances, Debunking “Junk DNA” Is Almost Trendy Science and Culture July 10, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 8 Why not treat the whole genome as functional? This is a radical concept, but perhaps the focus on genes distorts our understanding. Read More ›