raccoon Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 28, 2026 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsIntelligent Design Tagged , biochemistry, DNA, DNA transcription, ENCODE project, evolution, functionality, genetics, genome, human genome, intelligent design, junk DNA, junk RNA, Long Story Short, mammalian genome, mouse, native genome, Nature (journal), Nobel Prize, noise, noncoding RNAs, proteins, Puffin-D, RNA, RNA sequences, sequence conservation, sequences, Thomas Cech, yeast Garbage Goodbye: In Blow to Junk RNA, “Majority” of Transcription Not “Background Noise” Casey Luskin May 28, 2026 Evolution, Genetics, Intelligent Design 8 A 2026 paper reports on an AI trained on genomic data, including data from a 2024 paper, enabling it to predict when transcription would be initiated. Read More ›
Cytosol Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date March 18, 2026 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , 3D spatial organization, active matter, Aristotle, biology, cargo recognition, cascades, cells, condensates, cycles, cytoplasm, Darwin's Black Box, dissipative systems, DNA transcription, droplets, electrolytes, endoplasmic reticulum, Energy, enzyme activity, function, goal-directedness, Golgi bodies, Ilya Prigogine, intentionality, intracellular landscape, living systems, lysosomes, machines, macromolecules, matter, mechanism, medical school, Michael Behe, mitochondria, molecular biology, molecular grammar, naturalism, neo-Darwinian evolution, nucleus, organisms, physics, Riccardo Babic, scaffolding, Science and Culture Today, science of purpose, signaling cascades, St. Thomas Aquinas, structure, TCA cycle, telos, tornadoes, Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Velcro, whirlpools Active Matter: How Function Determines Structure Stephen J. Iacoboni March 18, 2026 Biology, Intelligent Design 8 As always, the approach of naturalism is to reduce the complexity of natural phenomena to basic physical laws. Read More ›