Nasice_cement Type post Author Casey Luskin Date April 1, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Aeon, amoeba, biological systems, biology textbooks, cell biology, Charudatta Navare, church, college, computers, cytoplasm, Denis Noble, developmental biologists, egg cell, embryo, eukaryotic cell, factory, feminism, genes, human technology, humanities, humans, ideology, information, intelligent design, machines, Marcello Barbieri, metaphors, mutual aid, nucleus, organelles, post-modernism Aeon: “The Cell Is Not a Factory” — It’s Far More Complex Casey Luskin April 1, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 Viewing the cell’s nucleus as keeping a “collaborative notebook” implies record-keeping to maintain order and to act toward a purpose. Read More ›
PNAS 2 Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date January 31, 2019 CategoriesScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Black Box, David Klinghoffer, Douglas Axe, Eugene Koonin, eukaryotic cell, Irreducible Complexity, Kevin Williamson, Lehigh University, molecular evolution, multiverse, National Academy of Sciences, National Institutes of Health, National Review, PNAS, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, Richard Sternberg, Scott Minnich, stem, Stephen Meyer, The Edge of Evolution, theoretical biology, University of Idaho When It Comes to Origins Science, Is PNAS Really “Ready When You Are”? Sarah Chaffee January 31, 2019 Scientific Freedom 6 Kevin Williamson imagines that scientists are free to “slug it out” in journals and other academic settings, so that the truth reliably emerges. Read More ›