ape-double-on-black Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 23, 2025 CategoriesHuman Origins and AnthropologyIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , 1 percent myth, 1 percent myth (series), atheism, Brian Miller, Casey Luskin, chimpanzees, Darwinian evolution, environments, evolutionary icons, Günter Bechly, humans, immaterial genome, Michael Levin, National Museum of Natural History, Nature (journal), Plato, Plato's Revenge, Platonic space, protein-coding DNA, Richard Sternberg, science education, science media, Smithsonian Institution, Supplemental Data, zookeepers, zoos Immaterial Genome Meets the Human-Chimp “1 Percent” Myth David Klinghoffer May 23, 2025 Human Origins and Anthropology, Intelligent Design, Zoology 2 Obviously, humans and chimps are a whole lot more “different” than 1 percent. But…they’re also a lot more different than 14.9 percent. Read More ›
guppies Type post Author Emily Reeves Date May 8, 2024 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , adaptation, Darwin's Finches, David N. Reznick, downstream, Drosophila, ecosystem, environments, genetic variations, germline, guppies, macroevolution, mutations, natural selection, population, random mutation, stickleback fish, upstream Predictions for the Guppy from the Engineering/Design Model Emily Reeves May 8, 2024 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 An engineering model would predict that guppies are designed with operational parameters for different traits, which are set by overarching design logic. Read More ›
Tesla Type post Author William A. Dembski Date January 31, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & MindTechnology Tagged , An Idol for Destruction (series), artificial intelligence, Bertrand Russell, chess, Elon Musk, environments, Los Angeles, machines, Robert J. Marks II, self-driving cars, software, Tesla, West Virginia Artificial General Intelligence: AI’s Temptation to Theft Over Honest Toil William A. Dembski January 31, 2024 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind, Technology 7 The worry is — and it’s a legitimate worry — that our environments will increasingly be altered to accommodate AI. Read More ›