Carl Linnaeus Type post Date November 14, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , bacteriophages, BioEssays, Biological Reviews, cellular life, censorship, cytoplasm, Dave Speijer, eukarya, Evolution News, evolutionary theory, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, mitochondria, nucleic acid, proteins, viruses Revising the Linnaean System: Where to Locate Viruses? And the Problem with Mitochondria Science and Culture November 14, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 4 The venue for a remarkable call for government censorship of science was a peer-reviewed biology journal. Read More ›
CELS Type post Date June 1, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , archaea, bacteria, Big Data, Carl Woese, Cédric Blais, CELS 2021, Conference on Engineering in Living Systems, Current Biology, Darwinian theory, eukarya, genomics, hybridization, intelligent design, introgression, John M. Archibald, jumping genes, lateral gene transfer, natural selection, On the Origin of Species, taxonomy, Texas, transposons, Tree of Life Darwin’s Tree Morphs into a Network, with Implications for Intelligent Design Science and Culture June 1, 2021 Biology, Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 If lateral gene transfer is rampant throughout life, the universal tree of life becomes a matter of philosophical preference, not empirical demonstration. Read More ›