Junk DNA Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 28, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , aging, cancer, Casey Luskin, Current Biology, Endogenous retroviruses, function, gene expression, genomics, Gil McVean, human genome, intelligent design, junk DNA, lymphocytes, PLOS Biology, PNAS, transposable elements, UC Santa Cruz, zebrafish In “Junk DNA,” Here Are Benefits of Seeking Function David Coppedge February 28, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 You wouldn’t toss out all the punctuation in a book as “junk ABC” now, would you? Punctuation has a function. Read More ›
diversity Type post Date January 25, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, Adam and Eve, Adam and the Genome, alleles, bottleneck, chimpanzees, Christianity, Dennis Venema, effective population size, genetic diversity, Gil McVean, heterozygosity, Nature Ecology and Evolution, Oxford University, population size, Queen Mary University, Reviewing Adam and the Genome, Richard Buggs Adam and the Genome and Human Genetic Diversity Science and Culture January 25, 2018 Evolution, Faith & Science 20 Nobody in the ID community is capable of showing Dennis Venema to be wrong? Well, that’s a bit heavy on the attitude. Read More ›