gorilla Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date June 21, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Adam and Eve, adrenaline, Andromeda galaxy, ankylosing spondylitis, babies, bonobos, Charles Darwin, chimpanzees, comedians, Doctor's Diary (series), evolution, exercise, fish, gorillas, human origins, humor, Immune System, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, laughter, oxygenation, rats, Robin Williams, specified complexity, The New England Journal of Medicine, topoisomerases, UCLA, Uranus Doctor’s Diary: There’s Nothing Funny About Evolution Geoffrey Simmons June 21, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Is a sense of humor a byproduct, an accident, or was it installed on purpose? For better health? There definitely seems to be a purpose. Read More ›
homo erectus Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 10, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and AnthropologyPaleontology Tagged , Adam and Eve, Australopithecus, Bernard Wood, Bible, Christianity Today, Darwinian evolution, East Africa, evolution, FOXP2, Francis Collins, genes, Genetics (journal), Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, human intelligence, human origins, Ian Tattersall, In Quest of the Historical Adam, In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), integration, Journal of Molecular Biology and Evolution, mutations, Nature (journal), paleoanthropology, Review of Craig's In Quest of the Historical Adam (series), Robin Williams, Sapiens (book), science and religion, The Language of God, Time Magazine, William Lane Craig, Yuval Noah Harari Missed Opportunity: Passing over Scientific Problems with Human Evolution Casey Luskin November 10, 2021 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology, Paleontology 18 William Lane Craig’s rhetorical strategy is essentially to accept whatever mainstream evolutionary paleoanthropology says. Read More ›
Platypus Type post Date November 5, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biofluorescence, Charles Darwin, convergent evolution, elections, evolution, evolutionary theory, flying squirrel, fur, intelligent design, Mammalia, opossum, platypus, Robin Williams Biofluorescence in the Platypus — Design at Its Whackadoodliest Science and Culture November 5, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 3 Those paragraphs are, not surprisingly, a de rigueur nod to evolutionary theory, and as usual, it's pure gloss, no substance. Read More ›
human speech Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 3, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionLinguistics Tagged , __k-review, Africans, Broad Institute, Cell (journal), Darwinism, FOXP2, Francis Collins, Frontiers in Psychology, gene, genome, Harvard University, humans, Ludwig-Maximilian University, Michael Denton, MIT, natural selection, Nature (journal), non-Africans, Research, Robin Williams, The Biology of the Baroque, The Language of God Update: Still No Evolutionary Explanation for Human Language David Klinghoffer August 3, 2018 Evolution, Linguistics 5 “The case that human language develops step by step through natural selection is weakened by the fact that no single language gene has ever been discovered.” Read More ›