Tag: science journals
A Reckoning for Darwinism as “Junk DNA” Flops
As a product of care and intention, the genome ought to be comparable in a way with products of human genius, with every detail there for a reason.
On the Origin of Life, a Measure of Intelligent Design’s Impact on Mainstream Science
Dr. Xavier rejects ID, but recommends an ID book to “everyone I can” because “it exposes a lot of the questions that people try to sweep under the carpet.”
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.
With One Short Rule, Philip Ball Explains Why “Junk DNA” May Be a Placeholder for Ignorance
Here is Ball’s proposed rule for molecular biologists: “stop assuming,” he writes, “we know which parts of DNA matter and which don’t.”
Why We Can’t Trust the Science Journals — A Climate Scientist Explains
Patrick Brown left academia so he could engage in better science. And, that allowed him to write this article.