2560px-Great_Indian_Fruit_Bat_MET_DP167067 Type post Author Brian Miller Date September 6, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionGeneticsIntelligent Design Tagged , common ancestry, environmental conditions, evolution, evolutionary change, fitness landscapes, intermediates, mutations, paleobiology, population, robotics, Stuart Burgess, traits, vertebrate limbs Fitness Landscapes Demonstrate Perfection in Vertebrate Limbs Resulted from Intelligent Design Brian Miller September 6, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Genetics, Intelligent Design 8 These observations present two dire challenges to undirected evolutionary models. Read More ›
Denis Noble Type post Author Casey Luskin Date February 16, 2024 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , agency, BioEssays, blueprint, Brian Miller, Bruce Alberts, Cell (journal), computers, Denis Noble, Dennis Venema, diseases, DNA, Douglas Axe, evolution, factory, genes, genomes, How Life Works, intelligent design, intrinsically disordered proteins, junk DNA, machines, Nature (journal), organisms, paradigm shift, Philip Ball, proteins, purpose, RNA genes, traits, transformers Denis Noble in Nature: “Time to Admit Genes Are Not the Blueprint For Life” Casey Luskin February 16, 2024 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 In his review, Noble comes right out and says that “Classic views of evolution should also be questioned.” Read More ›
cherries Type post Author Emily Reeves Date August 8, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionScience Tagged , common ancestry, common design, dependency graph, evolution, evolutionary tree, Gutsick Gibbon, intelligent design, randomness, synapomorphies, traits, Winston Ewert, YouTube videos Just How Well Does That Cherry-Picked Data Fit an Evolutionary Tree? Emily Reeves August 8, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Science 3 The tree-like pattern from the dataset was not very strong. Of course, if you shuffle it, it looks strong compared to randomness. Read More ›