Meyer book background image Type post Author Emily Sandico Date November 3, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , "God of the gaps", argument from ignorance, cause, cells, effect, intelligent cause, intelligent design, Kindle, libraries, logic, logical fallacy, Return of the God Hypothesis, specified information, Stephen Meyer Fundamentals Friday: The Logic of Intelligent Design Emily Sandico November 3, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Stephen Meyer and other proponents of intelligent design theory are often accused of committing the "God of the gaps” fallacy. Read More ›
Tribrachidium heraldicum Type post Author Günter Bechly Date March 22, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , animals, begging the question, Dickinsonia, DNA, Ediacaran animals, Ediacarans, Evolution News, genomes, humans, Ikaria, Kimberella, logical fallacy, Mary Droser, Precambrian House of Cards Series, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Russia, South Australia, Tribrachidium, White Sea assemblage A Precambrian House of Cards Günter Bechly March 22, 2021 Evolution 3 Wow, that's cool, they not only found the elusive Ediacaran animals but even could unravel their genomes!? Read More ›
Secrets Behe Episode 3 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 26, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, argument from incredulity, bees, biological information, bugs, butterflies, Charles Darwin, China, cockroaches, Darwinists, design intuition, Discovery Institute, DNA, evolution, Evolution News, fleas, flies, football field, gears, genes, humans, insects, intelligent design, logical fallacy, Michael Behe, mutations, natural selection, nature, planthopper, Secrets of the Cell, spiders, video series In Episode 3 of Secrets of the Cell, Michael Behe Tests “The Power of Evolution” David Klinghoffer February 26, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 The planthopper bug has gears in its legs that permit it to jump what in human terms would be like vaulting the length of two football fields at one go. Read More ›
hurdles Type post Author Steve Laufmann Date April 18, 2018 CategoriesAnatomyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, adaptability, aesthetics, bad design, blood pressure, brain, disease, evolution, Heretic: One Scientist’s Journey from Darwin to Design, Howard Glicksman, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk, logical fallacy, Matti Leisola, Nathan Lents, Neo-Darwinism, redundancy, Richard Dawkins, robustness Your “Botched Body”: Bad Design or Bad Logic? Steve Laufmann April 18, 2018 Anatomy, Engineering, Intelligent Design 5 Whenever a complex system of systems works at all, it seems counterproductive to attempt a “bad design” argument. Read More ›