Steven Novella Type post Author Brian Miller Date March 24, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , complexity, early Earth, evolution, information, Nature Communications, podcast, press release, proteins, replication, ribozymes, RNA, RNA replication, RNA world, Steven Novella, University of Tokyo, Yale University Yale’s Steven Novella Falls for Origin-of-Life Hype Brian Miller March 24, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 4 Novella is a prominent atheist who jumped at the chance to promote the secular creation narrative of life’s origin. Read More ›
Edward_Robert_Hughes_-_Midsummer_Eve_(1908c) 2 Type post Author Kirk Durston Date April 25, 2019 CategoriesCosmologyEvolutionFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, Andrei Linde, Bernard Carr, Charles Darwin, Christianity, Craig Venter, Darwinism, DNA, Eugene Koonin, experimental science, fantasy, fantasy science, George Ellis, inferential science, Joe Silk, molecular machines, multiverse, nature, North America, Ockham’s razor, proteins, RNA replication, Roger Penrose, Sabine Hossenfelder, science, science fiction, scientism On Fantasy in Modern Science Kirk Durston April 25, 2019 Cosmology, Evolution, Faith & Science 9 An attribute of a good sci-fi story is that it should open new vistas for the imagination while, at the same time, not requiring the reader to put up with the preposterous. Read More ›
1280px-Champagne_vent_white_smokers Type post Author Kirk Durston Date April 15, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionGeologyOrigin of Life Tagged , __k-review, amino acids, atheism, Austin Hughes, bacteria, Bible, Canada, common descent, Darwinian theory, Eugene Koonin, evolution, evolutionary biology, faith, fruit flies, humans, inferential science, observations, RNA replication, science, scientism Inferential Science — What Could Go Wrong? Kirk Durston April 15, 2019 Evolution, Geology, Origin of Life 11 There are many solid, trustworthy inferences in modern science, but there are those that are not very trustworthy at all. Read More ›