pine trees in snow Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date April 18, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEnvironment & ClimateEvolutionIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , "survival of the fittest", antifreeze, cattle, Charles Darwin, crustaceans, Dogs, evolution, evolutionary theory, fish, Herbert Spencer, horses, intelligent design, James Tour, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Jonathan Wells, mollusks, natural selection, organisms, oxygen, oxymoron, pine tree, puppies, purpose, science of purpose, selection, sheep, speciation, Stephen Meyer, variations, water A New Look at Natural Selection Stephen J. Iacoboni April 18, 2023 Biology, Environment & Climate, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 5 If you are a pine tree, you need to have antifreeze in your needles if you are rooted beyond certain latitudes or elevations. Read More ›
suicide by Zoom Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 5, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsTechnology Tagged , abortion, assisted suicide, California, coronavirus, dehumanization, Humanize, medicine, New York State, oncologists, Oregon, oxymoron, pandemic, patients, Philadelphia Inquirer, Planned Parenthood, silver lining, suicide, telehealth, telemedicine, Wesley Smith, Zoom Suicide by Zoom — Technology and Dehumanization David Klinghoffer June 5, 2020 Bioethics, Technology 3 “We are always told that ‘strict guidelines will protect against abuse.’ It’s always been baloney.” Read More ›
Nobel Prize Type post Author Ann Gauger Date December 28, 2018 CategoriesBiochemistryChemistryIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, amino acids, Caltech, chemical reaction, DNA, Douglas Axe, E. coli, enzymes, evolution, Frances Arnold, George P. Smith, Gregory P. Winter, industry, intelligent design, Matti Leisola, medicine, mutations, Nobel Prize, oxymoron, proteins, science, sequence space, universe, University of Missouri #5 of Our Top Stories of 2018: It’s Not “Evolution” — A Nobel Prize for Engineering Enzymes Ann Gauger December 28, 2018 Biochemistry, Chemistry, Intelligent Design 5 In effect, protein engineers are using the power of random change plus intelligent design to see what if anything will improve function. Read More ›
Nobel Prize Type post Author Ann Gauger Date October 4, 2018 CategoriesBiochemistryChemistryEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, amino acids, Caltech, chemical reaction, DNA, Douglas Axe, E. coli, enzymes, evolution, Frances Arnold, George P. Smith, Gregory P. Winter, industry, intelligent design, Matti Leisola, medicine, mutations, Nobel Prize, oxymoron, proteins, science, sequence space, universe, University of Missouri It’s Not “Evolution” — A Nobel Prize for Engineering Enzymes Ann Gauger October 4, 2018 Biochemistry, Chemistry, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 In effect, protein engineers are using the power of random change plus intelligent design to see what if anything will improve function. Read More ›