Charles Darwin Type post Author Michael Flannery Date January 12, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionScience Tagged , Adrian Desmond, Alfred Russel Wallace, Benjamin Wiker, Darwin: Portrait of a Genius, eugenics, evolution, forced sterilization, From Darwin to Hitler, Germany, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Harry Bruinius, Heidelberg University, history, Hitler’s Ethic, Jacques Barzun, James Moore, Janet Browne, Joseph Stalin, New Scientist, On the Origin of Species, Paul Johnson, Phillip E. Johnson, Racism, Richard Weikart, Slate, Social Darwinism, Stanley Jaki, The Descent of Man, The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, Thomas Malthus, United States, Victorian England Remembering Paul Johnson’s Assessment of Darwin Michael Flannery January 12, 2023 Evolution, Science 10 The reviewers that insist this work is “ludicrous,” a “smear,” or a “hatchet job” are wrong; it is none of these. Read More ›
Army medic Type post Author David Coppedge Date October 4, 2022 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , Armed Forces, Cell (journal), chemotherapy, Clodagh O’Shea, DNA, enzymes, evolution, Heidelberg University, human genome, intelligent design, North Carolina State University, orchestra, proofreading, protocols, ribosomes, specialists, sunlight, University of Geneva, University of Heidelberg, University of Toronto Armed Forces in the Cell Keep DNA Healthy David Coppedge October 4, 2022 Biology, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 9 Science reporters struggle for metaphors to describe the complex operations they see going on in the cell. Read More ›
kinesin Type post Author David Coppedge Date May 13, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , chloroplasts, Current Biology, David Wolpert, evolution, Francis Bacon, Heidelberg University, heterochromatin, information flow, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, Jay Richards, jumping genes, junk DNA, kinesin, mechanical philosophy, Nobel Prize, open reading frame, Prime Mover, proteins, Ribosome, Robert Boyle, robotics, Rockefeller University, Salk Institute, Santa Fe Institute, University of Southern California, Vanderbilt University, William A. Dembski, William Paley Natural Machinery Operates Without Intervention; But How? David Coppedge May 13, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 11 We’re going to need a new philosophy: one that can handle realities the Elizabethans and Victorians could never have imagined. Read More ›
cephalopod Type post Date May 11, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Alan Turing, bacterial flagellum, bats, Cambrian Explosion, cell walls, cephalopods, CheY, Communications Biology, Darwinists, Heidelberg University, Israel, kinetochore, Nature (journal), Newfoundland, Science Advances, South America, University of Colorado, Unlocking the Mystery of Life, Whitehead Institute, windmills Cephalopods Join the Cambrian Explosion? And Other Topics in ID Science and Culture May 11, 2021 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 If fossils from Newfoundland have been interpreted correctly by paleontologists at Heidelberg University, they give more worries to Darwinists. Read More ›
Purdue Type post Date January 22, 2020 CategoriesBotanyIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __edited, algae, Charles Carter, Charles Darwin, chloroplasts, Communications Biology, cryo-electron microscopy, Cyanobacteria, diatoms, Discovery Institute, earth, enzyme, eukaryotes, evolution, foresight, Heidelberg University, homology, imaging techniques, intelligent design, Maxwell’s demon, microscopes, nanomachines, Nature (journal), photosynthesis, Photosystem II, Purdue University, Second Law of Thermodynamics, University of North Carolina Informed Choice Seen in Cellular Nanomachines Science and Culture January 22, 2020 Botany, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 8 As imaging techniques approach nanometer resolution, the detailed workings of molecular mechanisms reveal precision engineering designs. Read More ›