Tag: PNAS
In Cells, Proofreading and Repair Testify to Intelligent Design and Foresight
Like a skilled workman, the cell maintains “An array of tools, each one finely tuned.”
Research Reveals Biological Design in the Sensing and Manipulation of Force
The laws of physics constrain what can happen, but not how it happens. Biological designs show expertise in the use of forces for function.
Allostery: How Cells Do Remote Control
Cells have perfected action at a distance: not by magic, but by control of distant sites through carefully arranged functional intermediates.
In Defiance of Evolution, Hierarchical Design Is Ubiquitous in Biology
Design with interdependent layers presents a challenge to neo-Darwinism. Natural selection is oblivious to anything but an immediate beneficial variation.
In Carbon Isotope Excursions, Darwinists Lose Another Excuse for the Cambrian Explosion
The claim that a spike in carbon isotope concentrations led to the explosion of biological diversity in the Cambrian doesn’t hold up, as if it would have helped, anyway.