More than 3% of human genome closer to either bonobo or chimp genome than they are to each other.
John Hockenberry’s TED talk: Does design require intent?
The Choice of (and for) Your Life
Suppose your enemy is trying to frame you for murder. He does a good job of fabricating evidence, and you are arrested and charges are filed. Of course you are not guilty, so you refuse all plea offers. But being innocent does not guaranty you will win at trial, and your “no plea” position is very risky. Indeed, the stakes could not be higher. Under the law of your state the only allowable penalty for murder is life in prison without possibility of parole. Your case goes to trial, and the DA’s entire case against you comes down to the testimony of two witnesses. Even though you are not guilty, it is clear to everyone that if either of these witnesses Read More ›
He said it: Rising star geneticist Laurence Hurst on the biggest question of all in genomics
Last Chance to Join the Engineering and Metaphysics Conference
This is your last chance to come and participate in the Engineering and Metaphysics conference. The conference, located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, begins on Friday. If you’re in the area, come on by! However, it is best to preregister to make sure that we have enough conference packets and meals for everyone. See the website to register and for more information, including a list of talks. Several UD authors are presenting talks. While it is not an ID-specific conference, several talks are on ID-related topics. Check it out today!
Winners of Harry Lonsdale’s $50,000 Origin of Life Challenge announced
Onion story too much like actual cosmology today to qualify as spoof
NAS Authority Speaks: That Would Be Blasphemous! Religion Provides the “Acid Test” As Evolution Goes Viral
We have seen that an evolution professor and member of the National Academy of Sciences, John Avise, argued that the evolution of the species isnot by chance and that the evolution of complexity is not a problem because high fitness, point mutations are fixed in populations of bacteria in a test tube. You might think that such erroneous claims must be one-time blunders—mistakes that would be quickly retracted when pointed out. But this is not the case. These are standard evolutionary arguments. Avise’s book was endorsed by several evolutionists, and when I pointed out these enormous blunders other evolutionists rushed to his defense. Fallacious thinking is fundamental to evolutionary thought. But why? After all, evolutionists such as Avise are certainly not intellectually lacking. Read More ›
Philosopher Douglas Groothuis doubts that commentator Dinesh D’Souza solves problem of evil via evolution
From “A Sound Barrier: Why Chimps Aren’t Talking” (Salvo 21), on chimpanzee vs. human intelligence
Memo to NYT reviewer re Prometheus: Creationism for geeks is still creationism
Fishy Mammalian Spines
Here it is: a mammalian/reptile vertebrate spine a hundred million years before it was to be fully used on land. A spine with multiple segments is a feature of land-dwelling animals but the discovery of the same anatomical feature in a 345-million-year-old eel suggests that this complex anatomy arose separately from, and perhaps before, the first species to walk on land. Tetrapods, which include the first species to walk on land as well as all modern mammals, reptiles, birds and humans, possess vertebrae organized into five distinct segments. From head to tail, the spinal vertebrae can be categorized into cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral and caudal sections, each with its own characteristic anatomy. By contrast, fish vertebrae are typically categorized anatomically Read More ›
Oldest galaxy spotted 12.91 bn light years away … and this time it may be real?
Evolutionists Just Invented a New Euphemism For Today’s Evolutionary Tree Failure
Now they’re calling it “displacement.” An ubiquitous and fundamental DNA binding protein is missing from a heat-loving single cell organism. Instead, there is a novel protein in its place: Read more