Month: February 2024
Data Can Appear in Science Journals — Out of Thin Air
While many researchers decried the results, University of Copenhagen econometrician Søren Johansen said something worth pondering.
Getting It Together: Tethers, Handshakes, and Multitaskers in the Cell
Running a cell requires coordination. How do molecules moving in the dark interior of a cell know how and when to connect? Protein tethers offer new clues.
Fossil Friday: The Big Bang of Tertiary Birds and a Phylogenetic Mess
There was an abrupt origin, a burst of biological creativity, which is best explained by an infusion of new information from an intelligent agent.
Can Evolution and Intelligent Design Be Happily Wedded?
Casey Luskin kicks off a series of interviews responding to theologian Dr. Rope Kojonen’s proposal.
Stifling Opposition Is the Real “Anti-Science”
In the Great Barrington Declaration, three noted epidemiologists questioned the wisdom of societal shutdowns and keeping children out of school.