Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

String theorist thinks universe might be designed

From Intellectual Takeout: Reasoning aside, Kaku’s conclusion is pretty is clear. “The final solution resolution could be that God is a mathematician,” says Kaku. “The mind of God, we believe, is cosmic music. The music of strings resonating through 11-dimensional hyperspace.” More. We’re more familiar with string theory, etc., being used to explain why the universe isn’t designed. Kakio has critiqued Darwinism too in the past. Lives dangerously. See also: Multiverse cosmology: Assuming that evidence still matters, what does it say?

Half billion-year-old bacteria not “simple”

From ScienceDaily: Researchers are resurrecting ancient bacterial protein complexes to determine how 3.5-billion-year-old cells functioned versus cells of today. Surprisingly, they are not that different. Despite a popular hypothesis that primordial organisms had simple enzyme proteins, evidence suggests that bacteria around 500 million years after life began already had the sophisticated cellular machinery that exists today.” More. See also: See also: Michael Denton on the discontinuity of nature: Denton focuses on the many examples of fundamental features of life forms, like the pentadactyl limb of vertebrates, that are uniform, but serve no adaptive purpose in particular, pointing perhaps to discoverable physical patterns in nature, like the patterns in the chemical elements. and Sometimes Denton sounds like a Darwin who got Read More ›

Are atheists lonely and invisible?

From Daily Caller: A sad, sparse crowd of a few thousand people dotted the expansive National Mall in Washington, D.C. on Saturday to be part of a “Reason Rally,” an event devoted increasing the political power of Americans who reject religion. “There are millions and millions and millions of atheists in America,” Robyn E. Blumner, CEO of the Richard Dawkins Foundation, told the meager flock of believers in nothingness. Blumner also complained that no one listens to atheists. More. Have yourself an atheist-free evening. See you in the morning. See also: 10 reasons why atheists are delusional Follow UD News at Twitter!

Grizzly-polar bear hybrids in arctic

From RealClearScience: Grolar bears a result of climate change Climate change is in part responsible for the emergence of these grolar hybrids, as polar bears that live and hunt on the ever-shrinking Arctic sea ice are forced on land during mating season in spring and summer. At the same time, male grizzly bears are expanding their habitats, roaming into polar bear territories, and emerging from hibernation earlier in the year. Inuit hunters have spotted grizzly bears in the Arctic for decades, but numbers are believed to have increased recently, causing males to disperse further in search of a female.The result is that where the two species meet, they mate, says Derocher. More. Some of us think bears have been sinning for Read More ›

Quote of the Day

“No argument can pry doubt from the minds of those wishing not to believe.”  WJM Exactly.  Dozens of idiots commenting on these pages have engaged in what we call “insane denial.”  WJM’s particular comment was directed to daveS, and if Dave wants to join their ranks, there really is nothing anyone can do to stop him.  All thinking people must respond to Arthur Leff’s Grand Sez Who, and when they respond they have two and only two choices: Choice 1:  Insist on radical personal autonomy and deny the objective nature of morality. Choice 2: Bow humbly before the obvious existence of self-evident moral truth. There is a price for either choice. The price of Choice 1 is rationality itself. The Read More ›

Okay, so Darwinian biology is over now?

From ScienceDaily: Enel et al at the INSERM in France investigate one of the most noteworthy properties of primate behavior, its diversity and adaptability. Human and non-human primates can learn an astonishing variety of novel behaviors that could not have been directly anticipated by evolution — we now understand that this ability to cope with new situations is due to the “pre-adapted” nature of the primate brain. … This breakthrough shows that we have taken big step towards understanding the local recurrent connectivity in the brain that prepares primates to face unlimited situations. This research shows that by allowing essentially unlimited combinations of internal representations in the network of the brain, one of them is always on hand for the Read More ›

Unfair animal intelligence tests

From Bob Holmes at New Scientist on unfair animal intelligence tests: Elephants can’t recognise themselves in a mirror? Sure they can – if you give them a mirror big enough to show more than just a leg or two. As researchers learn to design more appropriate IQ tests that meet the animals on their own terms, more and more claims about things only humans can do are proving false. But Byrne’s concern is with one particular part of the intellectual landscape, a skill he calls “insight” – an animal’s ability to form and manipulate ideas in its head. Many apparently sophisticated behaviours need not imply any insight at all, he argues. When a band of chimps cuts off every escape route Read More ›

String theory: Welcome to the future of science

From Peter Woit at Not Even Wrong: String theory continues to make progress. Today the news is from Megan Fox: “Sometimes I just know things,” she explains. “I accidentally tap into stuff sometimes. I used to do it as a kid, and I do it as an adult. I crossed over and saw a future string.” String, as in string theory. Fox is into stuff like that. She’s also spiritual. On her Instagram profile, she describes herself thusly: “Child of the Cherokee Tribe … forest nymph … Lunar Leo mother goddess to 2 bohemian revolutionaries-my kamikaze free spirit & my peaceful warrior.” A few months ago it was Jaden Smith moving the subject forward: More. Do these people have a Read More ›

Dino death didn’t “cause” mammals

From ScienceDaily: New research reports that, contrary to popular belief, mammals began their massive diversification 10 to 20 million years before the extinction of the dinosaurs. Elis Newham, PhD student in Engineering and the Environment and co-author of the study, which is published Proceedings of the Royal Society B, said: “The traditional view is that mammals were suppressed during the ‘age of the dinosaurs’ and underwent a rapid diversification immediately following the extinction of the dinosaurs. However, our findings were that therian mammals, the ancestors of most modern mammals, were already diversifying considerably before the extinction event and the event also had a considerably negative impact on mammal diversity.” The old hypothesis hinged upon the fact that many of the Read More ›

Common descent: Ann Gauger’s response to Vincent Torley

Here: Well, I must say I didn’t expect to be honored by a 7500 word broadside by philosopher Dr. Vincent Torley, assisted by Dr. Josh Swamidass, Assistant Professor at Washington University. I guess they must have a lot of spare time. The reason for the post at Uncommon Descent? Both hold common descent to be absolutely, incontrovertibly, obviously true, and they apparently wish I would fall into line and stop embarrassing them by doubting common descent. They wish I would give up my “peculiar kind of intellectual obstinacy.” The argument is in the end all about common descent. (There are a few accusations of poor reasoning, obscuring the issue, and even a little bad faith along the way.) Look, intelligent Read More ›

Science as politics is dangerous in the long run

You don’t know what political correctness prevents you from knowing From the Bulletin: Americans were scandalized by revelations from Flint, Michigan, where citizens have dealt with unsafe, lead-tainted drinking water for two years. When the news broke—of the tainted water itself, the state agencies who initially dismissed the problem, and the bungled federal response—many asked, “How could this happen here?” The fact is, though, that what went wrong in Michigan has happened before and continues to happen in various parts of the United States: Regulators charged with protecting the public interest fail to do so, because they act based on political pressure—real or perceived—rather than science. When this happens, two things can result. First, actual immediate harm can come to Read More ›

Defending the multiverse against evidence

Repackaged by PBS as defending “beauty”: From PBS: For example, while the Large Hadron Collider has so far failed to show evidence of supersymmetry, many have essentially said that the collision wasn’t powerful enough or that some small modifications are all that’s needed to fit the theory they love with the data they gathered. “Supersymmetry has been around since 1974, for 42 years, and it doesn’t really have any evidence that it’s there. But people really bet their careers on this,” Gleiser explains. “Many physicists have spent 40 years working on this, which is basically their whole professional life.” That may change in in ten years or so, he says, when further advances to the LHC could force the hangers-on Read More ›

“Hobbits” in the news again, from 700,000 years ago

From various sources, we learn about those short people: They are older than thought: “These new findings suggest that Homo floresiensis is indeed a dwarfed form of Homo erectus from Java, a small group of which must have gotten marooned on Flores and evolved in isolation,” van den Bergh says. The fossils also dispel any lingering theories that the hobbits were a form of diseased Homo sapiens, with smaller heads and statures due to developmental conditions such as Down syndrome or microcephaly, the birth defect linked to the modern Zika outbreak. (NatGeo) They are said to have shrunk rapidly: Scientists have discovered the 700,000-year-old ancestor of the tiny primitive human known as “the Hobbit”. Its fossils indicate that the normal-sized Read More ›

Second layer of information in DNA?

Some of us hacks did not know this: There is a second layer of information above DNA sequences, partly mechanical and partly tied to nucleosome positions. Currently fronted at Phys.org with the usual accompanying nonsense File with: Darwinism is nuts. See also: Promoting purpose in nature without design? Follow UD News at Twitter!