HouYifan29762728494cropped Type post Author Casey Luskin Date June 26, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , 1 percent myth, 1 percent myth (series), Amazon, chimpanzees, Chimps and Critics (series), common ancestry, DNA, Financial Times, function, genetic difference, genetics, genomes, human exceptionalism, humans, Joel Duff, junk DNA, Nature Communications, Nucleic Acids Research, nucleotides, objections, reactions, repetitive DNA, Science (journal), Smithsonian Institution, University of Chicago Press, Zachary Ardern Critics Change the Topic: Do Human-Human Genetic Differences Matter? Casey Luskin June 26, 2025 Evolution, Genetics, Human Origins and Anthropology 22 One of the common yet unexpected reactions from critics to the discovery that humans and chimps are 15 percent genetically different is to change the topic. Read More ›
Mammoth Type post Author Rob Sheldon Date September 1, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biological information, Charles Darwin, elephant, embryos, Financial Times, gene editing, George Church, ghost lineages, horizontal gene transfer, intelligent design, Siberia, Texas, viruses, woolly mammoth What “Resurrecting” the Woolly Mammoth Would Mean for Darwinism Rob Sheldon September 1, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Intelligent design would become the most likely hypothesis to abductively explain the data of life's history. Read More ›
genetic engineering Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 28, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , biotechnology, China, CRISPR, diseases, Financial Times, genetic engineering An Example of Ethical Human Genetic Engineering Wesley J. Smith June 28, 2021 Bioethics, Medicine 2 The primary ethical problems with CRISPR in humans so far have come from “germ line” genetic engineering. Read More ›