young Darwin statue Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date February 10, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionLife SciencesTechnology Tagged , cosmos, Darwinian evolution, descent with modification, evidence, evolution, fossils, homology, molecular phylogeny, mutations, natural selection, Neo-Darwinism, On the Origin of Species, Science, speciation, The Autobiography of Charles Darwin, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Top Scientific Problems with Evolution (series) What Are the Top Scientific Problems with Evolution? Jonathan Wells February 10, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences, Technology 4 No sane person believes that nothing changes over time, or that the cosmos, technology, and culture have no history. Read More ›
Montsechia_vidalii_20170317 Type post Date October 6, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Casey Luskin, Charles Darwin, convergence, evolution, evolutionary theory, fossils, geologists, Harvest House, homology, ID the Future, innovation, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, molecular phylogeny, natural selection, podcast, random mutations, The Comprehensive Guide to Science and Faith Biologist Jonathan Wells Gives “Top Scientific Problems with Evolution” Science and Culture October 6, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Darwin anticipated “innumerable transitions” in the fossil record, but such a rainbow of transitional forms has never been found. Read More ›
American Museum of Natural History Type post Date June 23, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , American Museum of Natural History, birds, Brazil, Colin Patterson, convergence, Darwinism, extinction, fruit, macroevolution, molecular phylogeny, predictions, Science (journal), seeds, speciation, Switzerland What Do Biologists Really Know About Macroevolution? Science and Culture June 23, 2021 Evolution 8 There lives in biology a great consensus truth that evaporates upon close scrutiny. Read More ›
humpback whale Type post Date October 10, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, awe, China, common ancestry, convergent evolution, Darwinian mechanisms, echolocation, evolution, evolutionary biologists, genes, homology, Illustra Media, intelligent design, last common ancestor, Living Waters, mammals, materialists, molecular phylogeny, Paul Nelson, physiology, prestin, proteins, Richard Sternberg, Sarah Chaffee, Science Advances, whales, wonder Evolutionary Relationships In Echolocation — An Obsession that Smothers Wonder Science and Culture October 10, 2018 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Perhaps it is awe-inspiring to evolutionary biologists to try to work a puzzle, trying to find how everything is connected by common ancestry. Read More ›