Blueprint-Cell-IllustraOrigin Type post Author David Coppedge Date December 27, 2024 CategoriesOrigin of Life Tagged , "God of the gaps", coacervates, code, evolution, George Washington Carver, hydrothermal vents, James Joule, James Simpson, James Tour, Joana Xavier, metabolism, Michael Faraday, Nick Lane, Paul Nelson, Perry Marshall, primordial soup, Professor Dave, proteinoid microspheres, publish or perish, RNA world, Robert Boyle, spark-discharge tubes, Stephen Meyer, Susan Mazur, target of selection No. 6 Story of 2024: Devastating Critique of Origin-of-Life Research David Coppedge December 27, 2024 Origin of Life 13 The magazine started by Norman Lockyer in 1869 to promote Darwin’s naturalistic views has had to face judgment day. Read More ›
Blueprint-Cell-IllustraOrigin Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 28, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryEcologyEvolutionGeologyIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifePhilosophy of Science Tagged , "God of the gaps", anesthesia, arteries, astrobiology, autocatalysis, Biomimetics, blood, blood vessels, circulation, coacervates, confession, conservation, genes, George Washington Carver, heart, hydrothermal vents, intelligent design, James Joule, James Simpson, James Tour, Joana Xavier, Johannes Kepler, Leslie Orgel, memory, methodological naturalism, Michael Faraday, mRNA vaccines, Murchison meteorite, Nick Lane, paradigm shift, Paul Nelson, proteinoid microspheres, proteins, reverse-engineering, RNA world, Robert Boyle, Robert Shapiro, scientific revolution, Signature in the Cell, spark-discharge tubes, Stephen Meyer, Susan Mazur, Systems Biology, target of selection, The Origin of Life Circus, University College London, veins, William Harvey From Nature, a Devastating Critique of Origin-of-Life Research David Coppedge February 28, 2024 Biochemistry, Ecology, Evolution, Geology, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Philosophy of Science 12 The magazine started by Norman Lockyer in 1869 to promote Darwin’s naturalistic views has had to face judgment day. Read More ›
Venus_Flytrap_showing_trigger_hairs Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 16, 2023 CategoriesBiologyBotanyEngineeringIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , bioelectricity, C. elegans, codes, communication, cows, Current Biology, Darwinism, Dionaea muscipula, Duke University, human body, information, Linköping University, Michael Faraday, microbes, Phys.org, rabbits, Science Advances, Sweden, ticks, Velcro, Venus flytrap Bioelectricity Gives Biologists a Jolt David Coppedge August 16, 2023 Biology, Botany, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 We’ve explored bioelectricity in cells. We’ve looked at it within the human body. Now, electrical engineering is being found in the realms between. Read More ›