Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
Topic

evolution

Desperately Seeking Evolutionary Innovation by Chance

Ask evolutionists for a clear, unambiguous example of a new gain in function by chance at the genetic level. They will be hard pressed to show one. Read More ›
Aristotle

Why Aristotle and Aquinas?

Here’s a fair question: Why do I prattle on so much about scholastic philosophy? Of what genuine relevance is it to intelligent design? Read More ›
University of Vermont

Dawkins (Not) at Berkeley – The Best Irony

He helped get Ben Stein de-platformed as a commencement speaker at the University of Vermont over -- you guessed it -- Stein’s take on evolution. Read More ›
Williams_adjustable_wrench

A “Natural” Adjustable Wrench? More Conversations with a Theistic Evolutionist

Somehow, without any calculation at all, we’re all certain that geological processes can’t make a wrench. Read More ›
four-winged fruit flies

Zombie Science: Four-Winged Fruit Fly, Eighteen-Winged Dragonfly — Two Hardy Evolutionary Icons

In a new video conversation, Dr. Wells recounts the progress of a lab experiment and its transformation in the hands of Darwin apologists. Read More ›
Bernard laboratory

Biologist J. Scott Turner’s Rediscovery – How Darwinism Fatally Overlooks What Life Is

Intellectual discovery is often a matter of rediscovery: reviving insights that were available before but overlooked, forgotten, or neglected. Read More ›
Nothing to See Here

Nylonase: Move On, Nothing to See Here, Says Theistic Evolutionist

The supposed sudden emergence of the enzyme nylonase has been a chief talking point for the power of evolution for many years. Read More ›
insensitive sandwich

Evolution and the Insensitive Sandwich

David Brooks of the New York Times has taken a lot razzing for a column about social class signifiers and how they serve to insulate the upper middle class. Read More ›
rangeomorphs

In Ediacaran Seas, Huge Rangeomorphs Appeared with a “Bang”

Anything that Simon Conway Morris puts his name on is of immediate interest, but this would seem to evade the most fascinating question of all in life’s history. Read More ›

© Discovery Institute