Big Bang Type post Author Robert J. Marks II Date July 1, 2021 CategoriesFine-tuningPhysical Sciences Tagged , Conservation of Information, dice, economics, France, Great Britain, No Free Lunch, nothing, Principle of Insufficient Reason, probability, Robert J. Marks II, Scotland, thermodynamics, Wales, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert Bernoulli, Keynes, and the Big Bang Robert J. Marks II July 1, 2021 Fine-tuning, Physical Sciences 3 In analysis of fine-tuning, No Free Lunch Theorems, and conservation of information, Bernoulli’s PrOIR is foundational. Read More ›
How_proteins_are_made_NSF Type post Author Brian Miller Date June 24, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , algorithmic specified complexity, ATP synthesis, biological information, biological systems, chemical energy, Conservation of Information, DNA, Energy, entropy, functional information, George Montañez, information, Irreducible Complexity, Jeremy England, matter, Michael Behe, No Free Lunch, Principle of Insufficient Reason, protein rarity, Winston Ewert The Information Enigma: Going Deeper Brian Miller June 24, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 To provide a deeper understanding of the theoretical underpinnings of information-based arguments, I will delve into the underlying mathematics. Read More ›
colorful-file-folders-and-books-on-shelves-in-office-stockpa-1274662276-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date December 30, 2009 CategoriesComputational SciencesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __nedited, active information, Conservation of Information, cybernetics, Evolutionary Informatics Lab, No Free Lunch, No Free Lunch theorems, peer-reviewed, Principle of Insufficient Reason, Robert J. Marks II, search, William A. Dembski William Dembski and Robert Marks Publish Mainstream Scientific Paper on Conservation of Information Casey Luskin December 30, 2009 Computational Sciences, Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 Is there a "magic bullet" mechanism by which blind and unguided search engines can find rare, isolated targets? Read More ›