DNA Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 15, 2023 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyCosmologyEvolutionGeneticsIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , bacteria, bioinformatics, cancer, cell biology, cellular function, complex and specified information, diseases, enzymes, evolutionary computation, galactic habitable zone, information, information theory, intelligent agency, intelligent design, junk DNA, Kenneth Miller, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, molecular machines, Only a Theory, paleontology, pharmacology, physiology, predictions, protein science, science stopper, systematics It’s Intelligent Design, Not Darwinism, that Drives Scientific Progress Casey Luskin December 15, 2023 Anatomy, Biology, Cosmology, Evolution, Genetics, Intelligent Design, Physics 10 Here is a list showing various fields where intelligent design is helping science to generate knowledge. Read More ›
stop light Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 9, 2022 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyCosmologyEvolutionGeneticsIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , bacteria, bioinformatics, cancer, cell biology, cellular function, complex and specified information, diseases, enzymes, evolutionary computation, galactic habitable zone, information, information theory, intelligent agency, intelligent design, junk DNA, Kenneth Miller, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, molecular machines, Only a Theory, paleontology, pharmacology, physiology, predictions, protein science, science stopper, systematics, The Positive Case for Intelligent Design (series) Science Stopper? Intelligent Design as a Fruitful Scientific Paradigm Casey Luskin May 9, 2022 Anatomy, Biology, Cosmology, Evolution, Genetics, Intelligent Design, Physics 10 When critics claim that research is not permitted to detect design because that would stop science, it is they who hold science back. Read More ›
on the rocks Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date November 21, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesMedicine Tagged , __k-review, data, evolution, evolutionary biology, John Ioannidis, medicine, narrative gloss, Nautilus, pharmacology, Philip Ball, Research, scandal, science, skepticism, Stanford University, storytelling, University of Virginia Science on the Rocks Sarah Chaffee November 21, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences, Medicine 2 Perhaps confidence in science can, at times, undermine science itself. How much real history has evolutionary storytelling obscured? Read More ›