Tag: PNAS
Michael Behe: A Man and His Critics
Behe is not in a defensive posture, despite his critics. He continues to advance.
Small Wonders: Scientists Reveal the Secrets of Amazing Little Insects and Crustaceans
It often seems that the closer you need to look, the greater the wonder. It’s as if someone set it there to hide, waiting for us.
With Kenneth Miller, Behe’s Would-Be Nemesis, History Repeats Itself
The Brown University biologist is still out there, reassuring the world that unguided “evolutionary mechanisms” comfortably explain the wonders of biology.
New Paper Confirms the Trilobite Explosion
It’s important to note that the “true tempo of early animal evolution” exists in evolutionists’ imaginations, not in the rocks.
Proteome Is Analogous to Language
A paper likens the proteome to a language with a “quasi-universal grammar” possessing the minimum complexity necessary to function as a cell.