Jonathan Wells 2 Type post Date December 10, 2019 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, binding sites, BioEssays, DNA, ENCODE, evolution, genome, intelligent design, Jonathan Wells, junk DNA, multicellular organisms, non-coding DNA, PNAS, The Myth of Junk DNA, transcription factors, transposable elements Jonathan Wells Was Right: Non-coding DNA Continues to Show Function Science and Culture December 10, 2019 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 Design predictions rise as evolutionary assumptions fall. The junk DNA myth is, for all practical purposes, falsified. Read More ›
Mitochondrion_cristae_tomogram Type post Date June 11, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, ATP synthase, autism, cancer, chimpanzees, Drosophila, evolutionists, genome, heart disease, human uniqueness, humans, intelligent design, junk DNA, mitochondria, Nature (journal), Nature Genetics, non-coding DNA, proteins, science stopper, transcription factors, University of Toronto Genetic Surprises Support Intelligent Design Claims Science and Culture June 11, 2019 Intelligent Design 7 Several news items reinforce ideas advanced by ID advocates regarding junk DNA, irreducible complexity, and human uniqueness. Read More ›
Radboud University Type post Date June 14, 2018 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, binding site, central dogma, DNA, double helix, epigenetics, evolution, information, Jonathan Wells, methylation, mutations, Nature Genetics, proteins, Research, transcription factors, vertebrates More Information Found in DNA: The Shape Code Science and Culture June 14, 2018 Biology, Intelligent Design 7 Researchers at Radboud University in the Netherlands made “a remarkable discovery” about a protein named Polycomb that binds to DNA. Read More ›
watching clock Type post Author Brian Miller Date February 15, 2017 CategoriesAnatomyBiochemistryEvolution Tagged , __edited, binding site, Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, innovation, intelligent design, software analogy, theistic evolution, transcription factors, vertebrate eye, waiting-time problem Eye Evolution: The Waiting Is the Hardest Part Brian Miller February 15, 2017 Anatomy, Biochemistry, Evolution 7 Without calling it a series, I've written several articles recently that followed a logical path. Read More ›