E. coli Type post Author Emily Reeves Date March 7, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionFine-tuningIntelligent Design Tagged , Bacillus subtilis, beauty, biological redundancy, biological systems, design triangulation, duplicate genes, E. coli, elegance, enzymes, evolution, fitness, function, gene expression, genetic information, intelligent design, laboratory conditions, Neo-Darwinism, optimality, precision, proteins, robustness, speakers, sporulation, Stanford University, storage, transmission Application of ID: Leveraging Design Triangulation to Anticipate Biological Redundancy Emily Reeves March 7, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design 8 In previous posts, I’ve covered how neo-Darwinism can make biological redundancy more confusing than it should be. Read More ›
DNA Type post Author Emily Reeves Date March 3, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biological redundancy, design triangulation, DNA, duplicate genes, evolution, fitness, function, genes, intelligent design, junk DNA, Martin Nowak, natural selection, Neo-Darwinism, purpose, redundancy How Intelligent Design Clarifies Biological Redundancy Emily Reeves March 3, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 4 ID licenses scientists to be curious about non-conserved biological redundancy and to investigate the possibility that biological redundancy is purposeful. Read More ›