fear Type post Date January 3, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , blind natural forces, Casey Luskin, convergent evolution, Eric Cassell, evolution, genetic changes, ID the Future, insects, intelligent design, No Free Lunch theorems, podcast, programmed behaviors, purpose, spider silk, spiders, teleology, teleophobia, William A. Dembski Teleophobia: Cassell on the Unreasonable Fear of Intelligent Design Science and Culture January 3, 2022 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 2 What do biologists make of the apparently purposive nature of all these different kinds of complex programmed behaviors? Read More ›
Animal Algorithms Type post Date November 18, 2021 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , algorithms, Animal Algorithms, Baylor University, colony insects, computer engineering, computers, constraints, convergence, Darwinian processes, David Wolpert, Eric Cassell, evolution, ID the Future, intelligent design, No Free Lunch theorems, podcast, programmed behaviors, random changes, Robert J. Marks II, Rubik’s cube, teleophobia, William Macready How Convergent Animal Algorithms Challenge Darwinism Science and Culture November 18, 2021 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 2 Eric Cassell discuss the No Free Lunch theorems of William Macready and David Wolpert, and the problem of blind searches for everything from Rubik’s cube solutions to the formula for WD-40. Read More ›