Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
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Utricularia

Drosera
Photo: Drosera, by Shiv's fotografia, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

Carnivory in Plants: A Problem for Evolution

The paper highlights features of carnivorous plants that exhibit irreducible complexity, a characteristic of designed systems, citing the work of Michael Behe. Read More ›
loennig
Photo: Wolf-Ekkehard and wife and dog in his back yard in Köln, by Granville Sewell.

Wolf-Ekkehard Lönnig: An Intelligent Design Pioneer

Darwinism sounds superficially plausible until one looks at real plants and animals with their irreducibly complex details. Read More ›
bladderwort 2

Lesson from a Carnivorous Plant

The aquatic bladderwort lacks the charm of a rose, a lily, cherry blossoms, or many other plants you can think of, but it has something else to recommend it. Read More ›
Utricularia aurea 2

Aquatic Bladderworts — Michael Behe’s “Irreducibly Complex” Mousetrap in Nature

Behe offered the mousetrap as an example of a simple everyday device that is “irreducibly complex.” Read More ›
bladderwort-underwater-with-soft-sunlight-illuminating-delic-1276127708-stockpack-adobestock
Bladderwort underwater with soft sunlight illuminating delicate leaves
Image Credit: Вася Пупкин - Adobe Stock

Peer-Reviewed Article on Transposable Elements Cites “Irreducible Complexity” and Other “Teleologic” Factors

Plant geneticist Wolf-Ekkehard L�nnig argues that irreducibly complex structures may defy explanation by TEs or other Darwinian factors. Read More ›

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