MOLO RNA world Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date December 2, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignOrigin of Life Tagged , annus horribilis, Brian Miller, cells, Charles Thaxton, Colorado School of Mines, Darwinism, Dean Kenyon, experts, Guillermo Gonzalez, intelligent design, James Tour, Jonathan Wells, Marvin Olasky, metabolism, Privileged Species, Psalms, Rice University, Roger Olsen, Science Book of the Year, scientists, Seattle, Stephen Meyer, Texas A&M, textbooks, The Miracle of the Cell, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, virtue-signaling, Walter Bradley, What is Life? How Chemistry Becomes Biology, World Magazine, Year of the Expert Life’s Origin — A “Mystery” Made Accessible David Klinghoffer December 2, 2020 Intelligent Design, Origin of Life 7 If you “listen to the experts,” or anyway some of the experts, cells are “little bags of garbage” and Miller-Urey is a “true simulation of prebiotic chemistry.” Read More ›
termite-mound Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date March 26, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, Addy Pross, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Cambridge University, controversy, debate, ID the Future, intelligent design, Israel, J. Scott Turner, Live Science, National Academy of Sciences, National Center for Science Education (NCSE), National Public Radio, Neo-Darwinism, Oxford University Press, Purpose and Desire: What Makes Something "Alive" and Why Modern Darwinism Has Failed to Explain It, Quarterly Review of Biology, Stephen Meyer, Steven Newton, termite mounds, What is Life? How Chemistry Becomes Biology What Evolution “Controversy”? Scott Turner Gets High Praise from Quarterly Review of Biology David Klinghoffer March 26, 2018 Biology, Evolution, Intelligent Design 4 If you want to know what scientists themselves think about the current status of evolutionary theory, you have to look behind the curtain. Read More ›