flagellum Type post Author Casey Luskin Date September 10, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionFine-tuningIntelligent Design Tagged , bacterial flagellum, BIO-Complexity, chemotaxis, complexity, computer science, degradation, elegance, engineers, evolution, evolutionary biologists, filament, gears, gene expression, hook, intelligent design, peer-reviewed literature, proteins, Science (journal), stator, Waldean Schulz New BIO-Complexity Paper Details Complexity of Function and Assembly of Bacterial Flagellum Casey Luskin September 10, 2021 Evolution, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design 6 The author, Dean Schulz, an engineer with a PhD in computer science, takes a “bottom up” approach. Read More ›
Sahara Type post Author Brian Miller Date February 18, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, bacterial flagellum, dandelions, DNA, Douglas Axe, enzymes, evolution, filament, functional sequences, hook, intelligent design, Kansas, Michael Behe, molecular machines, mutations, New York City, North America, proteins, Sahara Desert, β-lactamase A Dentist in the Sahara: Doug Axe on the Rarity of Proteins Is Decisively Confirmed Brian Miller February 18, 2019 Intelligent Design 11 In a previous article I described the evidence that cooption faces insurmountable mathematical challenges in explaining the origins of such complex molecular machines as the bacterial flagellum. Read More ›
flagellum 2 Type post Author Brian Miller Date December 17, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, amino acids, bacterial flagellum, cooption, Darwin Devolves, degradation, Douglas Axe, Drosophila, E. coli, eye, filament, fitness landscape, Harvard University, hook, Irreducible Complexity, Michael Behe, motor, Nicholas Matzke, propeller, proteins Advances in Biology Discredit Argument that Cooption Can Explain Irreducible Complexity Brian Miller December 17, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 13 One of most popular attempts at explaining the flagellum via cooption was developed by Nicholas Matzke. Read More ›