Pakicetus Type post Author Günter Bechly Date May 17, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionHuman ExceptionalismPaleontology Tagged , Archaeopteryx, Australopithecus, biologic institute, computer simulation, coordinated mutations, Daniel Stern Cardinale, Discovery Institute, evolution, Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, Fossil Friday (series), generations, gradualism, Indohyus, John Sanford, limits of evolution, macroevolution, Michael Behe, Michael Shermer, Neo-Darwinism, neutral evolution, objections, Ola Hössjer, paleontology, population genetics, radiometric dating, recombination, Richard Dawkins, saltationism, species pair challenge, species pairs, The Edge of Evolution, tiktaalik, waiting-time problem Fossil Friday: Three Modern Scientific Challenges to the Causal Adequacy of Darwinian Explanations Günter Bechly May 17, 2024 Evolution, Human Exceptionalism, Paleontology 78 As a consequence of the collapsing tree problem, I suggest abandoning evolutionary classifications and return to a pre-Darwinian Linnaean classification. Read More ›
19.47 Type post Date November 19, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, Alzheimer’s, apoptosis, Biological Information: New Perspectives, brain, cells, Cornell University, Darwin Devolves, DNA repair, Douglas Axe, eggs, Immune System, inflammation, intelligent design, John Sanford, memory, mice, Michael Behe, mutations, National Institutes of Health, New York University, oocyte, pathogen, Quanta Magazine, Research, Robert J. Marks II, skin, stem cells, UC Davis, William A. Dembski Memory — New Research Reveals Cells Have It, Too Science and Culture November 19, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 A memory of past events helps a cell learn how to respond to recurring threats and protect the genome. Read More ›