SharpMX-7500photocopier Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date December 19, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLegal Science (jurisprudence) Tagged , ACLU, David dewolf, Dover, errors, George W. Bush, intelligent design, John West, Kenneth Miller, Kevin Padian, Kitzmiller v. Dover, media, New York Times, Nicholas Matzke, peer-reviewed publications, peer-reviewed research, Pennsylvania, plagiarism, Republicans, Rick Santorum, Ten Myths About Dover, Time Magazine Ten Myths About Dover: No. 2, “Judge Jones Is a Brilliant, Neutral Legal Scholar” Sarah Chaffee December 19, 2025 Intelligent Design, Legal Science (jurisprudence) 10 A full 90.9 percent of a key section was copied, either verbatim or nearly verbatim, from a brief submitted by the plaintiffs’ attorney. Read More ›
stack-of-educational-journals-and-research-articles-high-qua-862489619-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 18, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLegal Science (jurisprudence)Scientific Reasoning Tagged , BioLogos, Cambridge University Press, Discovery Institute, Dover trial, Foundation for Thought and Ethics, Francis Collins, intelligent design, Iowa State University, John Angus Campbell, Judge John E. Jones, Kitzmiller v. Dover, Michael Behe, mutations, Nobel Prize, Of Pandas and People, Origin of Species, peer-reviewed journals, peer-reviewed publications, peer-reviewed research, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, protein science, Scott Minnich, Stephen Meyer, Supreme Court, Ten Myths About Dover, The Design Inference, type III secretion system Ten Myths About Dover: No. 3, “Intelligent Design Has No Peer-Reviewed Publications” Casey Luskin December 18, 2025 Intelligent Design, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Scientific Reasoning 19 Unfortunately, Judge Jones got this simple question exactly wrong, giving life to a myth. This alone speaks volumes about his ruling. Read More ›
Behe-factory Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 17, 2025 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLegal Science (jurisprudence)Scientific Reasoning Tagged , bacteria, bacterial flagellum, Bradley Monton, Darwin’s Black Box, David Berlinski, dualism, education, evolution, Genome Biology and Evolution, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Judge John E. Jones, Kenneth Miller, Kitzmiller v. Dover, Laurence Moran, Manyuan Long, Michael Behe, National Center for Science Education, peer-reviewed publications, Scott Minnich, Stephen Meyer, Ten Myths About Dover, The Origin of Species, University of Kentucky, William Dembski, word salad Ten Myths About Dover: No. 4, “The Dover Ruling Refuted Intelligent Design” Casey Luskin December 17, 2025 Intelligent Design, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Scientific Reasoning 32 Expert witnesses like biochemist Michael Behe and microbiologist Scott Minnich testified about how irreducible complexity makes a positive case for design. Read More ›