Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
Topic

podcast

Sophia
Photo: Sophia the robot, by tk.

Robert J. Marks on Why AI Won’t Destroy the World, or Save It

Will robots or other computers ever become so fast and powerful that they become conscious, creative, and free? Read More ›
Dallas
Photo: Dallas skyline, By Robert Hensley (Flickr) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons.

Emily Reeves Previews Dallas Science and Faith Conference 2022

Speakers include Brian Miller, Casey Luskin, Ray Bohlin — and Stephen Meyer on the scientific vision of Isaac Newton! Read More ›
Orion Constellation
Photo: Orion Constellation, by NASA/JPL-Caltech.

Michael Denton on Fine-Tuning: Wheels Within Wheels

When it comes to evidence of fine-tuning in the universe, the more you look, the more you find. Read More ›
Rafting monkey
Photo: Rafting monkey, by Jdlrobson, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Return of the Rafting Monkeys: Why Biogeography Is No Friend of Common Descent

Evolutionists have to propose, for instance, that Old World monkeys rafted across the Atlantic from Africa to South America on a natural raft. Read More ›
engineering
Photo credit: ThisisEngineering RAEng, via Unsplash.

Engineers Crash the Evolution Party, Rethink Biological Variation

Miller and Luskin discuss fruit flies, finch beaks, stickleback fish, mutational hotspots, phenotypic plasticity, and the gravity well model. Read More ›
CRISPR
Image credit: NIH Image Gallery, via Flickr (public domain).

Sound the Alarm on Germline Genetic Editing

As Wesley Smith explains, it’s not just that germline editing could lead to unintended health consequences. Read More ›
chemistry flasks
Photo: Chemistry flasks, by David Mulder via Flickr (cropped).

A New Flaw in the Miller-Urey Experiment, and a Few Old Ones

It is an interesting finding, but as Wells explains, it is far from the first problem discovered with the experiment, nor the most serious one. Read More ›
fear
Photo credit: Aarón Blanco Tejedor, via Unsplash.

Teleophobia: Cassell on the Unreasonable Fear of Intelligent Design

What do biologists make of the apparently purposive nature of all these different kinds of complex programmed behaviors? Read More ›
desert ant
Photo credit: Muséum de Toulouse, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Animal Algorithms: Desert Ants and Honey Bees

Eric Cassell argues that these innate skills point to algorithms programmed into the ant’s brain and genome. Read More ›
Statue of Alfred Russel Wallace
Statue of Alfred Russel Wallace
Photo: Statue of Alfred Russel Wallace, by George Beccaloni / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0).

Listen: The Life of Alfred Russel Wallace

How did Charles Darwin react to Wallace’s argument for design? Historian Michael Flannery joins Tom Woodward to explain. Read More ›

© Discovery Institute