Strongylocentrotus_purpuratus_P1160330 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date July 24, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , body plans, Caltech, Darwin's Doubt, dGRNs, embryo, enzymes, Eric Davidson, evo-devo, Explore Evolution, Gerd Müller, Hox genes, Jeffrey Schwartz, John McDonald, macroevolution, microevolution, neo-Darwinian theory, population genetics, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sean B. Carroll, Stephen Meyer, The Joe Rogan Experience, University of Vienna Stephen Meyer’s Extensive Treatment of Evo-Devo Casey Luskin July 24, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 19 "On arriving at Caltech in 1971, Eric Davidson chose the purple sea urchin as his experimental model system." Read More ›
tap dancers Type post Author Michael Behe Date December 18, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , American Museum of Natural History, bacterial flagellum, Brown University, Cambridge University Press, Darwinian processes, Darwinism, Debating Design, function, Irreducible Complexity, John McDonald, John Polkinghorne, Kenneth Miller, Michael Ruse, National Center for Science Education (NCSE), Paul Davies, Richard Swinburne, Stuart Kauffman, type III secretion system, William A. Dembski Excerpt: An Obstacle to Darwinian Evolution Michael Behe December 18, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Rather than showing how their theory could handle the obstacle, some Darwinists are hoping to get around irreducible complexity by verbal tap dancing. Read More ›
Behe-and-Mousetrap Type post Author Michael Behe Date February 19, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Alvin Plantinga, biologists, Boston Review, Charles Darwin, chloroquine, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Black Box, Darwinian processes, Darwinists, designer, function, genes, H. Allen Orr, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, John McDonald, lungs, Michael Behe, Mount Rushmore, mouse, mousetrap, philosophers, Purdue University, The Design Inference, The Edge of Evolution, Where the Conflict Really Lies, William A. Dembski Philosophical-ish Objections to Intelligent Design: A Response to Paul Draper Michael Behe February 19, 2020 Intelligent Design 22 Recently I was asked by several people whether I had ever responded to an old review of my book Darwin’s Black Box. Read More ›
forest for the trees 2 Type post Author Brian Miller Date April 3, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Africa, bacteria, Cambrian Explosion, central nervous system, cichlid fishes, circulatory system, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Finches, E. coli, effective population size, enzymes, evolution, evolutionary theory, First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, fish, John Jay College, John McDonald, lemurs, macroevolution, Madagascar, Michael Behe, Nathan Lents, neutral theory, nylonase, organs, ossicles, Robert J. Marks II, Skeptic Magazine, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert In His Latest Review of Behe’s Darwin Devolves, Nathan Lents Misses the Forest for the Trees Brian Miller April 3, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 Evolutionists now increasingly believe that major adaptations are driven by neutral mutations. Read More ›