Surfer_in_Santa_cruz_11-8-9_-1 Type post Author Michael Denton Date August 6, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryFine-tuningIntelligent Design Tagged , Albert Einstein, biosphere, carbon, carbon dioxide, carbon-based life, Charles Tanford, ecosystem, electronegativity, elegance, Freeman Dyson, George Wald, glaciers, heat, hydrogen, hydrological cycle, hydrophobic force, intelligent design, Lawrence J. Henderson, Linus Pauling, metabolism, mitochondria, nitrogen, nucleus, ocean, oxygen, parsimony, primer, The Fitness of the Environment, The Wonder of Water, water Supreme Elegance: The Fine-Tuning of the Properties of Matter for Life on Earth Michael Denton August 6, 2024 Biochemistry, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design 25 In the biochemical domain, nature is indeed, as Isaac Newton rightly claimed, “pleased with simplicity” and abhors “superfluous causes.” Read More ›
Courageous-Behe Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 15, 2018 CategoriesBiochemistryChemistryIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, biomolecules, cellular metabolism, Darwinism, Discovery Institute, DNA, Frances Arnold, George P. Smith, Gregory P. Winter, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Jerry Coyne, junk DNA, Linus Pauling, Michael Behe, Michael Egnor, Nobel laureates, Revolutionary: Michael Behe and the Mystery of Molecular Machines (film) Behe’s Irreducible Complexity Validated by Chemistry Nobel Michael Egnor October 15, 2018 Biochemistry, Chemistry, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 5 Darwinist Jerry Coyne misunderstands design science. Intelligent design is two scientific inferences. Read More ›
Linus Pauling Type post Author Michael Egnor Date October 8, 2018 CategoriesBiologyChemistryIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, bioengineering, cellular metabolism, Darwinian mechanism, Design Inference, Eric Kandel, Frances Arnold, Francis Crick, genetic code, George P. Smith, Gregory P. Winter, intelligent design, James Watson, junk DNA, Linus Pauling, Nobel Prize, proteins Intelligent Design Wins Another Nobel Prize Michael Egnor October 8, 2018 Biology, Chemistry, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 6 The design inference is obvious but often implicit, because explicit acknowledgement of design in biology carries with it substantial career risk. Read More ›
Siddhartha Mukherjee Type post Author Brendan Dixon Date March 3, 2017 CategoriesEthicsGeneticsHistory of ScienceScientific Trustworthiness Tagged , __nedited, book reviews, crystallography, DNA, double helix, fame, gene, gene therapy, genomics, Health & Wellness, intelligent design, Linus Pauling, medicine, perverse incentives, Research, Rosalind Franklin, scientific integrity, Watson and Crick Siddhartha Mukherjee’s History of Genomics Is a Story with a Lesson Brendan Dixon March 3, 2017 Ethics, Genetics, History of Science, Scientific Trustworthiness 8 Writing history is hard. The details and dates, people and places can tumble over one another. Read More ›