Douglas Axe Type post Date November 6, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , chemists, computer simulation, design principles, Douglas Axe, evolution, golf, golf ball, Hamlet, Harvard University, intelligent design, Jonathan Witt, Michael Behe, National Academy of Sciences, natural selection, optimization, PNAS, polypeptides, protein evolution, proteins, Richard Dawkins, syllogism, Undeniable (book), Weasel program Are Proteins Attracted to Function? Science and Culture November 6, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 Doug Axe showed that functional space is a tiny fraction of sequence space in proteins. Evolutionists think they found a shortcut. Read More ›
Jupiter-2048x1075 Type post Author Robert A. Alston Date May 26, 2020 CategoriesPhilosophyPhysical Sciences Tagged , A Fortunate Universe, Alexander Vilenkin, carbon, cosmic fine-tuning, cosmic microwave background radiation, Edwin Hubble, electromagnetism, existence, Fred Hoyle, Georges Lemaître, Geraint Lewis, Goldilocks, golf ball, gravity, Kalam cosmological argument, Luke Barnes, Martin Rees, ping-pong ball, quantum cosmology, strong nuclear force, universe, weak nuclear force, William Lane Craig Book Excerpt: The Big Bang and the Fine-Tuned Universe Robert A. Alston May 26, 2020 Philosophy, Physical Sciences 9 What can we infer about the cause of the universe, about what brought it into being? Read More ›
dolphins Type post Date October 9, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Arthur C. Clarke, awe, bats, Captain Dave Anderson, convergent evolution, Darwinian theory, dolphins, echolocation, genes, Germany, golf ball, Illustra Media, Living Waters, mammals, Michael Ruse, molecular evolution, mutations, natural selection, neutral evolution, ping-pong ball, purifying selection, Science Advances, Thomas Kuhn, toothed whales, whales, wonder Awe at Echolocation? Nah, Convergence Again Science and Culture October 9, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 The passionate focus on evolutionary relationships in biology papers tends to obscure awe at the wonders in life. Read More ›