borgs Type post Author David Coppedge Date October 21, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , archaea, Borgs, Colorado, CRISPR-Cas9, Darwinian theory, DNA, evolution, genes, genetic information, greenhouse gases, heavy metals, Jennifer Doudna, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, methane, Methanoperedens, microbes, Nature (journal), Star Trek, toxins Beneficial Borgs Have Landed David Coppedge October 21, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Borg theory represents a major paradigm shift about how genetic information is stored and shared. Read More ›
Galápagos_finch Type post Date August 13, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , bioRxiv, CELS 2021, CRISPR, DNA, Emily Reeves, epigenetics, evolution, finches, gametes, genetic information, geneticists, hybridization, intelligent design, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Methanoperedens, natural selection, Nature (journal), Neil Thomas, New Scientist, organelles, Peter and Rosemary Grant, PNAS, Taking Leave of Darwin, The Scientist, University of Copenhagen, zygote Non-Mendelian Inheritance Undermines Neo-Darwinism Science and Culture August 13, 2021 Evolution 9 Neo-Darwinians breathed a sigh of relief when in the 1930s they found a way to incorporate Mendel’s laws of heredity. Now, that relief is unraveling. Read More ›