Basilosaurus Type post Author Günter Bechly Date April 25, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionHuman ExceptionalismIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , African elephants, amphibians, Asian elephants, Avalon explosion, Bayesian reasoning, birds, body plans, bottlenose dolphin, Cambrian Explosion, cattle, cedars, cetaceans, chimpanzees, European common frog, evolution, Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, Genesis, gorilla, great apes, Homo sapiens, horse, house sparrow, humans, hybridization, intelligent design, Judeo-Christian tradition, marine iguanas, moor frog, pygmy hippo, reptiles, river hippo, spectacled bear, whale evolution Species Pairs: A New Challenge to Darwinists Günter Bechly April 25, 2022 Evolution, Human Exceptionalism, Intelligent Design, Paleontology 21 I consider this simple argument as a final nail in the coffin of Darwinian unguided evolution. Read More ›
sparrow Type post Date November 12, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Australia, birds, cats, chimpanzees, crocodiles, cultural evolution, Current Biology, Darwinian evolution, Field Museum of Natural History, Flight, genome, house sparrow, innovation, intelligent design, mice, New Caledonian crows, Royal Society Open Science, syrinx, tools, University of Manchester, windpipe News for the Birds — Smart, Gymnastic, Flute-Playing, Surviving Science and Culture November 12, 2018 Intelligent Design 5 Is it reasonable that two populations would independently hit on an adaptation by chance? Read More ›