Seattle_New_Years_Eve_Fireworks_2011_(5) Type post Author Casey Luskin Date January 1, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Autonomous University of Madrid, C. elegans, Current Science, David Coppedge, evolution, Gary Ruvkun, gene regulation, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, Karolinska Institutet, microRNA, miRNA, National Cancer Institute, Nicholas Robine, Nobel Committee, Nobel Prize, Richard Sternberg, Robert Sarnovsky, roundworm, Subhash Lakhotia, The Conversation, The Myth of Junk DNA, Victor Ambros, William A. Dembski Happy New Year! No. 1 Story of 2024: Nobel Prize for Function of “Junk DNA” Casey Luskin January 1, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 That so-called genetic junk would turn out to be functional was a prediction of intelligent design going back to the 1990s. Read More ›
2024_Nobel_Prize_Posters_06 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 17, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Autonomous University of Madrid, C. elegans, Current Science, David Coppedge, evolution, Gary Ruvkun, gene regulation, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, Karolinska Institutet, microRNA, miRNA, National Cancer Institute, Nicholas Robine, Nobel Committee, Nobel Prize, Richard Sternberg, Robert Sarnovsky, roundworm, Subhash Lakhotia, The Conversation, The Myth of Junk DNA, Victor Ambros, William A. Dembski 2024 Nobel Prize Awarded for the Discovery of Function for a Type of “Junk DNA” Casey Luskin December 17, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 11 That so-called genetic junk would turn out to be functional was a prediction of intelligent design going back to the 1990s. Read More ›