money tail Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 29, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionMedicine Tagged , birth defects, bone, Carly Cassella, cartilage, Charles Darwin, children, Darwinian theory, doctors, embryo, evolution, evolutionary assumptions, human tails, Karl Giberson, notochord, ScienceAlert, spinal column, spinal cord, theistic evolutionists ScienceAlert Vindicates My Findings About Human “Tails” — They Are NOT an Evolutionary Atavism Casey Luskin June 29, 2023 Evolution, Medicine 6 The article cites new literature that has appeared since I published my own review nine years ago. Read More ›
tennis Type post Author Brian Miller Date September 14, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent DesignScience Tagged , "poor design", agnostics, ankle, anterior cruciate ligament, appendix, atheism, bones, Bristol University, Cambridge University, evolution, evolutionary assumptions, Human Errors, intelligent design, knee, motion, Nathan Lents, retina, shoulders, skeletal joints, Stuart Burgess, Westminster Conference on Science and Faith, wisdom teeth, wrist Burgess: Claims of “Poor Design” in Skeletal Joints Are Based on Critics’ Lack of Training in Engineering Brian Miller September 14, 2022 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Science 5 Burgess’s lecture confronts one of the most common abuses of science aimed at suppressing the evidence for design in biology. Read More ›
Adam_and_Eve_Tintoretto-1 Type post Author Ann Gauger Date October 25, 2019 CategoriesHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __edited, 1000 Genomes Project, Adam and Eve, BIO-Complexity, bottleneck, Broad Institute, chimpanzees, Dennis Venema, effective population size, evolutionary assumptions, first couple, genetic diversity, human origin, humans, mortality, Ola Hössjer, parsimony, Peaceful Science, population size, Richard Buggs, S. Joshua Swamidass, Steve Schaffner More Backstory on Our First-Couple Paper: Why Wasn’t This Done Before? Ann Gauger October 25, 2019 Human Origins and Anthropology 7 For the last forty years, population geneticists have repeatedly said that our population was never smaller than several thousand. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date September 24, 2016 CategoriesScientific Reasoning Tagged , __tedited, evolutionary assumptions, falsifiability, inductive reasoning, scientific method, settled science The Devil May Not Be in the Details — But the Truth Is Sarah Chaffee September 24, 2016 Scientific Reasoning 3 It's common to hear evolution presented as a nearly impregnable theory. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 12, 2016 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionPhilosophy Tagged , __tedited, argument, atheism, biases, bioethics, candor, censorship, debate, dialogue, evolutionary assumptions, extrapolation, Justin Brierley, meaning, metaethics, morality, opinions, Peter Singer, purpose, Richard Weikart, suffering In a Debate with Peter Singer, Richard Weikart Drills Down to the Bottom of Atheist Ethics David Klinghoffer May 12, 2016 Bioethics, Evolution, Philosophy 3 Just when you are thinking regretfully about how our critics flee from a fair fight on relevant issues, along comes bioethicist Dr. Singer. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date April 28, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionZoology Tagged , __tedited, Africa, biodiversity, biogeography, biological origins, capuchin monkeys, circular causality, evolutionary assumptions, foxes, human agents, land mammals, monkeys, navigation, ocean, plausibility, rafting, rafting animals, scientific reasoning, Sherlock Holmes, South America, vegetation The Curious Incident of the Non-Rafting Foxes David Klinghoffer April 28, 2016 Evolution, Zoology 8 It should be the facts that drive startling conclusions, not the theory that's supposed to explain the facts. Read More ›