digital-illustration-of-a-dna-stockpack-adobe-stock-32859465-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date December 2, 2025 CategoriesBiologyPhilosophy of ScienceScientific Reasoning Tagged , Albert Einstein, biology, Carl Woese, complementarity, Darwin's Black Box, dualism, Erwin Schrödinger, Essays on Life Itself, function, gravitation, Inertia, Irreducible Complexity, Isaac Newton, language, Life Itself, Mass, Michael Behe, molecular biologists, natural selection, phenotype, physics, randomness, René Descartes, Robert Rosen, science of purpose, scientific atheism, scientism, structure, What Is Life? In Search of a Unified Theory of Life Stephen J. Iacoboni December 2, 2025 Biology, Philosophy of Science, Scientific Reasoning 8 It can be said that Erwin Schrödinger anticipated what Michael Behe formally articulated as irreducible complexity. Read More ›
CaptiveRed-tailedHawkatBacara Type post Author Stephen J. Iacoboni Date October 29, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , __recommended, abstraction, airfoil, Albert Einstein, anatomy, antennae, Aristotle, biology, duality, emergence, engineering, Erwin Schrödinger, evolution, function, intelligent design, Isaac Newton, mathematicians, Michael Behe, molecular biology, physics, physiology, Pierre-Simon Laplace, propellers, René Descartes, Return of the God Hypothesis, rockets, science of purpose, scientism, specified irreducible complexity, Stephen Meyer, structure, structure-function relationship, Werner Heisenberg, What Is Life? Emergence and Irreducible Complexity: A Unified Theory Stephen J. Iacoboni October 29, 2025 Evolution, Intelligent Design 7 We are all familiar with the duality — structure and function — from both technology and biology. Read More ›