Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
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intelligent design

Self-Plagiarism for Me, but Not for Thee: Wesley Elsberry Replies

Evolution activist and marine biologist Wesley Elsberry hypocritically charges mathematician and ID advocate Granville Sewell with “self-plagiarism” and “deliberate gaming of the [academic publication] system.” What’s hypocritical about the charge? Well, recently in the journal Synthese, Elsberry himself self-plagiarized his own prior work. I don’t care if Wesley Elsberry “plagiarizes” himself, if that’s even the right the word for reworking or repurposing your own writing for different audiences. But as I argued earlier here, it is hypocritical for Elsberry to attack Sewell for doing exactly the same thing that Elsberry himself has done. Now, in his own defense, Elsberry has replied to me. In the context of the Darwin debate, when someone closes a rebuttal by calling your arguments “an Read More ›

Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: HuffPost Reviews The Myth of Junk DNA

Yes, it's the venerable principle of Darwinian theory that says: Whatever turns out to be the case is retrospectively recognized as having been exactly what the theory predicted. Read More ›

Privileged Planet: Dartmouth Physicist on the Surprising Fact of Complex Life, on Earth or Anywhere

This interestingly turns Steve Meyer's argument in Signature in the Cell on its head. Let's assume we get the first, simple life as a free gift. Read More ›

A Cordial Invitation to Dr. Dennis Venema and Others: The Gates to Commenters Are Thrown Open

We don't routinely open the comments feature at ENV because of the staffing requirement that comes into play when we do, cleaning up after Darwinists who don't know how to have a discussion on science without descending to the gutter. Read More ›

Richard Lenski’s Long-Term Evolution Experiments with E. coli and the Origin of New Biological Information (Updated)

Dennis Venema's argument collapses into this: "if Darwinian evolution can do anything, then ID is wrong." But this is not how we test ID, for ID readily allows that natural selection and random mutation can effect some changes in populations. Read More ›

Engineering at Its Finest: Bacterial Chemotaxis and Signal Transduction

The bacterial flagellum represents not just a problem of irreducible complexity. Rather, the problem extends far deeper than that. What we are now observing is the existence of irreducibly complex systems within irreducibly complex systems. Read More ›
the-first-butterflies-fluttering-over-a-clearing-with-spring-700967658-stockpack-adobestock
The first butterflies fluttering over a clearing with spring flowers.
Image Credit: brillianata - Adobe Stock

Listening to Butterflies

The metamorphosis of butterflies represents "the magic of reality," in Richard Dawkins's wonderful phrase, where actual, not made-up or fictional, biology is so astonishing that its power to move us never goes away. Read More ›

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