ICU Type post Author Emily Reeves Date May 2, 2023 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Albert Einstein, Charles Darwin, epigenetics, evolution, gene expression, genes, Hox genes, mitochondrial DNA, Müller cells, On the Origin of Species, optic nerve, orphan genes, retina, Richard Dawkins, selfish genes, Technion, The Blind Watchmaker, The Selfish Gene New Book Puts Richard Dawkins’s “Selfish Genes” in the ICU Emily Reeves May 2, 2023 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 Dr. Jarvis lays out numerous pieces of evidence that jeopardize Dawkins’s view that genes are selfish and act as the units of selection. Read More ›
eye Type post Author Emily Reeves Date December 24, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , An Introduction to Systems Biology, ARF, bioengineering, biological information, Darwinian processes, diarrhea, Erika DeBenedictis, gut bacteria, INK4a, intelligent design, MIT, Müller cells, natural selection, neurons, optic nerve, photoreceptors, physiology, random mutation, Technion, TEDx talk, Uri Alon, vertebrate eye, vestigial structures #9 Story of 2021: Verdicts of “Poor Design” in Biology Have a Poor Track Record Emily Reeves December 24, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 For years people cited the wiring of the vertebrate eye as evidence of “poor design” in biology. Read More ›
eye Type post Author Emily Reeves Date May 21, 2021 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , "poor design", An Introduction to Systems Biology, ARF, bioengineering, biological information, Darwinian processes, diarrhea, Erika DeBenedictis, gut bacteria, INK4a, intelligent design, MIT, Müller cells, natural selection, neurons, optic nerve, photoreceptors, physiology, random mutation, Technion, TEDx talk, Uri Alon, vertebrate eye, vestigial structures Verdicts of “Poor Design” in Biology Don’t Have a Good Track Record Emily Reeves May 21, 2021 Biology, Intelligent Design 5 For years people cited the wiring of the vertebrate eye as evidence of “poor design” in biology. Read More ›
topiary-animals Type post Date March 13, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, Ann Gauger, bacteria, bioengineering, Charles Darwin, Charles Thaxton, corn, Craig Venter, CRISPR-Cas9, design filter, Design Inference, DNA, Dogs, Douglas Axe, Galápagos Islands, genotype, intelligent design, maize, Mars rover, natural, Nature (journal), No Free Lunch, Paul Nelson, phenotype, Roger Olsen, Technion, The Design Revolution, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Walter Bradley, William A. Dembski, wolves Blurring the Line Between Natural and Artificial Science and Culture March 13, 2020 Intelligent Design 9 As technology mimics nature, at what point might future investigators be unsure about natural versus intelligent causes? Read More ›