Charles-Darwin Type post Date April 13, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, appendix, Charles Darwin, coccyx, Darwin-skeptics, diarrhea, disabilities, evolution, Foresight (book), Francis Collins, Icons of Evolution, Immune System, infection, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, John West, Jonathan Wells, Kenneth Miller, Marcos Eberlin, Michael Egnor, Nature Reviews Genetics, pseudogenes, Seth W. Cheetham, The Biology of the Second Reich, The Myth of Junk DNA, tonsils, vestigial structures, Wikipedia, wisdom teeth, Zombie Science (book) Pseudogenes Are Going the Way of Darwin’s “Rudimentary Organs” Science and Culture April 13, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 Long described as useless leftovers of evolution, pseudogenes are rising from the junk pile as functional entities. Read More ›
Xenopus_laevis_02 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date January 7, 2020 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionLife SciencesTechnology Tagged , __edited, Annual Review of Genetics, Cell (journal), CRISPR, DNA, evolutionists, Francisco Ayala, functionality, gene duplication, HBBP1, junk DNA, MicroRNAs, mutations, Nature Reviews Genetics, proteins, pseudogenes, RNA, Seth W. Cheetham, terminology, Thomas Kuhn, transcription, Xenopus laevis Nature Reviews Genetics — Pseudogene Function Is “Prematurely Dismissed” Casey Luskin January 7, 2020 Biology, Evolution, Life Sciences, Technology 17 As Seth W. Cheetham and his co-authors put it, biology suffers from “demotivation into exploring pseudogene function by the a priori assumption that they are functionless.” Read More ›