Tag: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Can Insects Be Conscious? Let’s Look at Bees First
It is important to qualify what “consciousness” means when we are talking about bees.
Lessons Not Learned from the Evangelical Debate over Adam and Eve
To his credit, William Lane Craig is among those evangelicals who have been willing to question arguments against Adam and Eve.
Phylogenetic Conflict Is Common and the “Hierarchy” Is Far from “Perfect”
It’s simply false for Dawkins to claim that when you compare genes of different animals, they “fall on a perfectly hierarchy — a perfect family tree.”
Painting by Neanderthals? Study Makes a Design Inference
An observation that supports a non-natural origin is that the pigment appears only in a small, conspicuous location.
Noncoding “Junk” DNA Is Important for Limb Formation
Some defenders of evolutionary orthodoxy would have us believe that we’ve only found a handful of non-coding DNA sequences that have function.