Michael Behe Type post Author Michael Behe Date December 10, 2020 CategoriesBiochemistryEvolution Tagged , A Mousetrap for Darwin, biological systems, blood clotting, Boston Review, Case Western Reserve University, Cell (journal), Darwin's Black Box, Darwinists, Eugenie Scott, evolution, fibrinogen, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Jonathan Wells, Karl Giberson, mice, Michael Ruse, MIT, National Academy of Sciences, natural selection, pathology, philosophers, plasminogen, pregnancy, Robert Pennock, Russell Doolittle, Russell F. Doolittle, The Scientist, UC San Diego, William A. Dembski Excerpt: A Reply to Michael Ruse Michael Behe December 10, 2020 Biochemistry, Evolution 5 Let me tell a little story about blood clotting, Russell Doolittle, and Michael Ruse. Read More ›
Train_wreck_at_Montparnasse_1895 Type post Author Michael Behe Date February 14, 2019 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __k-review, blood-clotting cascade, Cambridge University Press, chloroquine, Darwin Devolves, Darwin's Black Box, E. coli, Ernst Mayr, evolution, exaptation, Finding Darwin's God, gene duplication, hemoglobin, Hox genes, Kenneth Miller, Long Term Evolution Experiment, mammals, mutations, myoglobin, Nathan Lents, natural selection, neo-Darwinian evolution, olfaction, plasminogen, PLoS Genetics, primates, Response to Criticism, ribose, Richard Lenski, Robert L. Summers, Russell Doolittle, S. Joshua Swamidass, Science (journal), The Edge of Evolution, The Quarterly Review of Biology Train Wreck of a Review: A Response to Lenski et al. in Science Michael Behe February 14, 2019 Evolution 30 Richard Lenski has spent decades overseeing the most extensive, most acclaimed laboratory evolution experiment conducted to date. Read More ›