twins Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date July 11, 2023 CategoriesGeneticsMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Aeon, behavior, children, choices, Cyril Burt, disease, doppelgänger, eugenics, gene expression, genes, genome, homosexuality, identical twins, psychologists, selfhood, statistical methods, twins, UC Berkeley Genes Rule? The Evidence of Identical Twins Denyse O’Leary July 11, 2023 Genetics, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 6 Researcher on identical twins hoped to prove that Genes Rule! But there were ethics slippages along the way. Read More ›
editors Type post Author Casey Luskin Date October 8, 2020 CategoriesBiologyFine-tuningIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , academic freedom, Akira Sasaki, Biological Information: New Perspectives, censorship, defining terms, Del Ratzsch, Denise Kirschner, dependency graph, Elsevier, explanatory filter, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, John West, Journal of Theoretical Biology, keywords, macroevolution, Mark Chaplain, Michael Behe, National Center for Science Education (NCSE), peer-reviewed, publishers, search engines, specified complexity, statistical methods, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert Really? Editors Claim They Were “Unaware” of Article’s Intelligent Design Connections Casey Luskin October 8, 2020 Biology, Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 6 The implication is that the editors — Denise Kirschner, Mark Chaplain, and Akira Sasaki — did not realize the article was about intelligent design. Read More ›