eye Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date March 28, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , "poor design", “backwards retina”, Center for Science and Culture, complexity, designer, DNA, enzymes, evidence, evolutionary processes, fiber optic cables, helicase, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, Müller cells, organisms, replication, replisome, retina, topoisomerase Is Complexity an Argument Against Design? Jonathan McLatchie March 28, 2024 Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 Often these claims that “no designer would have done it that way” dissolve on closer inspection. Read More ›
Helicase Type post Author Jonathan McLatchie Date March 21, 2024 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , animations, ATP hydrolysis, bacteriophages, DNA, DNA polymerase, DNA polymerases, DNA replication, Drew Berry, E. coli, early Earth, evolution, helicase, hydrogen bonds, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, molecular machines, nanotechnology, naturalism, nucleotides, Oxford University Press, proteins, replisome, RNA, RNA world, Signature in the Cell, Stephen Meyer, topoisomerase The DNA Replisome: A Paradigm of Design Jonathan McLatchie March 21, 2024 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 One can hardly appeal to natural selection to account for the origins of DNA replication without assuming the existence of the thing one seeks to explain. Read More ›