dna-helix-3d-visualisierung-stockpack-adobe-stock-296750191-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Emily Reeves Date December 16, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , antiviral defense, cars, CasPEDIA, classes, color, CRISPR, CRISPR–Cas, DNA, evolution, gene diagrams, genome, genome engineering, intelligent design, Nature Microbiology, phylogenetic trees, phylogeny, proteins, sequence differences, shape, shared ancestry, subtypes, t-shirts, thread, types, viruses CRISPR’s Long Tail of Wonder: Too Many Solutions, Too Little Time Emily Reeves December 16, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 The implication: such a significant amount of diversity raises a challenge for unguided evolutionary mechanisms. Read More ›
001WildGoldenEagleandMajinghornPfyn-FingesPhotobyGi Type post Author Giuseppe Sermonti Date November 30, 2025 CategoriesBiologyReproductive Science Tagged , ascidian eggs, asymmetry, autonomy, biology, cell division, chromosomes, cytoplasm, eagle, ectoplasm, eggs, embryo, equifinality, equipotentiality, fertilization, frog, Hans Driesch, human egg, icons, induction, iron bar, iron filings, lancet, micropipette, morphogenesis, needle, Pavel Florenskij, physicists, regional specification, sea urchin, spatial organization, Styela, thread, totipotentiality, Wilhelm Roux From an Eagle’s Egg, an Eagle, and Other Mysteries Giuseppe Sermonti November 30, 2025 Biology, Reproductive Science 9 Pavel Florenskij, a Russian physicist and theologian (1882-1937), imagined a field on the surfaces of icons that portray sacred images. Read More ›