NASA-X-59 Type post Date March 2, 2025 CategoriesPlanetologyScience Reporting Tagged , astronauts, China, City Journal, Congress, David Klinghoffer, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Futurism, International Space Station, James B. Meigs, Mars, Moon, NASA, Popular Mechanics, research funding, Space Force, White House How NASA Might Change Soon Evolution News March 2, 2025 Planetology, Science Reporting 3 There has been much speculation in the tech media over the current government shakeup. Read More ›
Daphnia_pulex_1 Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date September 23, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Christof Koch, climate change, Daphnia pulex, Darwinian evolution, evolution, genes, intelligence, Michael Lynch, National Academy of Sciences, Popular Mechanics, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers, subtlety, University of Arizona, water fleas Covering for Darwin, Science Reporter Massages a Study Denyse O’Leary September 23, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Genetically, the model organism for studying evolution was just one water flea after another. Read More ›
Marks and Myers 2 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 10, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , artificial intelligence, Arxiv.org, Baylor University, cats, ChatGPT, computer science, creativity, Denyse O'Leary, Dogs, gene pool, George Montañez, Harvey Mudd College, humans, inbreeding, large language models, Popular Mechanics, pornography, Robert J. Marks II, Walter Myers, William A. Dembski Must AI Inevitably Degenerate into Nonsense, through “Model Collapse”? Casey Luskin November 10, 2023 Bioethics, Neuroscience & Mind 6 AI works because humans are real creative beings, and AIs are built using gigantic amounts of diverse and creative datasets made by humans. Read More ›
MOLO RNA world Type post Author Cornelius Hunter Date January 12, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionOrigin of Life Tagged , Alexander Oparin, computer simulations, DNA, enzyme, evolution, evolutionists, genome, information, laboratory, organisms, Popular Mechanics, random mutations, RNA, RNA world RNA World: Repeated Downfalls, Repeated Resurrections Cornelius Hunter January 12, 2021 Evolution, Origin of Life 3 Alexander Oparin’s 1924 prediction that origin-of-life research would be solved “very, very soon” hasn’t quite turned out right. Read More ›
scutoids_university_of_seville_and_lehigh_university 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 3, 2018 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, architecture, cells, Daniel Reeves, Darwinists, Discovery Institute, geometry, intelligent design, Jay Richards, Lehigh University, multicellular life, Popular Mechanics, Seattle, shape, The New Yorker, USA Today Previously Unknown “Scutoid” Shape, Critical to Biology, Calls Architecture and Design to Mind David Klinghoffer August 3, 2018 Biology, Intelligent Design 3 These sources should be more careful with their word choice. Someone could get the wrong idea. Read More ›