digital-illustration-of-a-dna-stockpack-adobe-stock-32859465-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date December 2, 2025 CategoriesBiologyPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , Albert Einstein, Ambrose Bierce, biology, Carl Woese, complementarity, Darwin's Black Box, dualism, dualisms, Erwin Schrödinger, Essays on Life Itself, function, gravitation, Inertia, Irreducible Complexity, Isaac Newton, language, Life Itself, Mass, Michael Behe, molecular biologists, natural selection, phenotype, physics, randomness, René Descartes, Robert Rosen, science of purpose, scientific atheism, scientism, structure, structure-function relationships, The Devil's Dictionary, What Is Life? In Search of a Unified Theory of Life Stephen J. Iacoboni December 2, 2025 Biology, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 8 It can be said that Erwin Schrödinger anticipated what Michael Behe formally articulated as irreducible complexity. Read More ›
Richard-Sternberg Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 16, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Reasoning Tagged , Benjamin Franklin, chicken, Claude Shannon, David Klinghoffer, Discovery Institute, Discovery Institute Press, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Essays on Life Itself, garden snail, genome, George D. Rose, Hypatia of Alexandria, information, intelligent design, James Clerk Maxwell, junk DNA, Levinthal paradox, Life Itself, logos, Michael Levin, nature, Neoplatonism, Nous, Peter Tompa, physical world, Plato's Revenge, Plotinus, Protein Science (journal), Richard Sternberg, Robert Rosen, seashells, snails, The Physical Basis of Biology, Walter Elsasser, whiteboard, yeast A Diffident Revolutionary David Klinghoffer June 16, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Reasoning 6 In a meeting with colleagues at Discovery Institute in 2024, Richard Sternberg was sketching his thoughts on a whiteboard. Read More ›