Joe_Rogan Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 10, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Bret Weinstein, Darwinism, designer, epigenetic information, evolution, evolutionary biologists, evolutionists, Günter Bechly, immaterial genome, intelligent design, Joe Rogan, morphological change, natural selection, parsimony, Platonists, random mutation, Richard Sternberg, Stephen Meyer, tiger, USAID Bret Weinstein on the Joe Rogan Podcast: Darwinism Is “Broken,” Intelligent Design Is “Catching Up” David Klinghoffer February 10, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Dr. Weinstein alludes to another Darwinian mechanism operating on top of the standard one of random mutation and natural selection. Read More ›
Tiger Moth Type post Author Olufemi Oluniyi Date February 21, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyEvolutionGenetics Tagged , Africa, Africans, Charles Darwin, chimpanzees, colonialism, Darwin Comes to Africa, ethnicity, Europe, Europeans, evolution, French Guinea, historiography, Joseph Stalin, morality, nationality, natural selection, Nigeria, pseudoscience, race, Racism, random mutation, religion, scientific racism, Social Darwinism, tiger The Cruel Legacy of Social Darwinism in Nigeria Olufemi Oluniyi February 21, 2023 Bioethics, Biology, Evolution, Genetics 6 Social Darwinism rests like a tiger moth on Darwinism, its mother theory; when challenged with facts, it just flits to a slightly different position. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date July 22, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, evolution, icon, ID the Future, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, long-necked giraffe, natural selection, peacock, podcast, probabilistic complexity, Research, sexual selection, specified complexity, The Evolution of the Long-Necked Giraffe, tiger, Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig Giraffe Weekend: Can Sexual Selection Save This Evolutionary Icon? David Klinghoffer July 22, 2018 Evolution, Intelligent Design 1 Geneticist Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig concludes that, “Sexual selection is not the cause of the long-necked giraffe.” Read More ›