Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
Topic

orphan genes

DNA 3

Researchers: It Exists; Therefore, It Evolved

According to some reporters and Darwinists, evolutionary theory today needs no more confirmation than existence. Evolution is a fact, remember? Read More ›
EVE_2020Science&Faith_ART

Westminster Conference on Science and Faith, April 3-4 in Philadelphia: Design and the Designer

The culture bombards us with materialism. That’s the case even as, at deeper and deeper levels, science reveals evidence of a plan, foresight, a deliberately shaping force working upon nature. Read More ›
Unity and Diversity of Life
University of Utah
Image: A scene from “The Unity and Diversity of Life” via University of Utah (screen shot).

Evolution Miseducation at the University of Utah

If you want your sons and daughters to be well educated about evolution, then hope their biology teachers don’t rely on materials from the Genetic Science Learning Center. Read More ›
leafcutter ants
Photo: Leafcutter ants in the Wilhelma Zoo, Germany, by Pjt56 [CC BY-SA 4.0 ], from Wikimedia Commons.

About Orphan Genes — What’s the Big Problem for Evolution?

Orphan genes — genes that are present in only one species, or a group of closely related species — are of particular interest to advocates of intelligent design. Read More ›
The_Creation_of_Adam 2

Dennis Venema’s Adam and the Genome: A Case Study in Cognitive Bias

In a previous article I described how scientific training can condition some scientists’ minds to resist the evidence in nature for intelligent design. Read More ›
DNA

Intelligent Design and the Advancement of Science

A little-known fact about intelligent design is that the majority of it scientists already perform their work alongside colleagues with differing views. Read More ›
Tree of Life

Zombie Science: Jonathan Wells on Overselling Darwin’s Tree of Life

With his own sly humor, Dr. Wells points out some scientific problems with regarding Darwin’s Tree as unassailable fact. Read More ›
orphan baby two-toed sloth
orphan genes
Orphaned baby two-toed sloth, Jaguar Rescue Center, Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, Costa Rica, by Matt MacGillivray via Flickr.

Pity the Unwanted Orphan Genes — An Awkward Topic for Darwinism

Discovery Institute philosopher of biology Paul Nelson is a great explainer. Read More ›

© Discovery Institute