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The Prevolution of Evolution: Life Marches In
September 17, 2008
There’s a new word preceding the E word evolution. Two Harvard scientists have made up a new word, prevolution, to describe a supposed stage before replication when natural selection was helping evolution evolve. What does prevolution act on? Simple, silly: prelife. Martin Nowak and Hisashi Ohtsuki titled their paper in PNAS, “Prevolutionary dynamics […]
Short-Term Flings at Saturns Rings
September 16, 2008
The Saturn system is assumed to be 4.5 billion years old like the rest of the solar system. What mean the delicate dances of ring particles that have been observed by Cassini lately? One would think moons and particles had pretty much settled into a stable old age by now, but no: some things change […]
Looking for Laws to Make Darwinism Scientific
September 15, 2008
Science needs natural laws. Darwinian laws that have been put forward by evolutionists contain so many exceptions and complexities, they seem to have a bad case of physics envy. Coping with Cope’s Rule: Evolution tends to make animals larger over time – except when it makes them smaller. In Science,1 Kaustuv Roy lamented the perils […]
Anglican Official Says Church Should Apologize to Darwin
September 14, 2008
The Church of England official feels the Church should apologize to Charles Darwin for having been too slow to accept his ideas in the 19th century. The statement, to be posted on a website promoting Darwin’s views, reads: Charles Darwin: 200 years from your birth, the Church of England owes you an apology for misunderstanding […]
Turing Test Stands: Your Brain Outperforms Computers
September 14, 2008
What is the speed of thought? Computer speeds are measured in megahertz and gigahertz, but that’s only part of the story. The ability to compute an answer to a problem depends on the programming, too. How does the brain compare with our best computers? A scientist from UC San Francisco and one from the Salk […]
Star Death Amazing but Puzzling
September 13, 2008
Twinkle, twinkle, little stBOOM! The explosions of some dying stars are so powerful yet so rapid, mere measurements seem inadequate to describe them. Two death-star events were reported in recent articles. Despite the bravado of textbook orthodoxy, the articles both mentioned that astronomers really don’t understand what’s going on all that well. Eta […]
Sea: the Light
September 13, 2008
Some of the most abundant unicellular organisms in the ocean are diatoms. Physicists are eagerly studying the optics of their pill-box-like shells, because they can manipulate light in surprising ways. Imitation of diatom light tricks may lead to biosynthetic devices like improved drug delivery systems and solar cells, an article on the BBC News said. […]
Animals Got Rhythm; Scientists Dont
September 12, 2008
Here’s a biological puzzle with plenty of room for young researchers to solve: the workings of biological rhythms. All animals respond to rhythms in periods of hours, days, weeks, months, and years, but as George E. Bentley (UC Berkeley) wrote in Current Biology,1 how they do it is only partially understood. “Sometimes the questions are […]
Naturalism and 9/11
September 11, 2008
It’s been seven years since the horrific terrorist attacks in America woke up everyone to the reality of evil. Secular, naturalistic evolutionists must of necessity explain evil as an artifact of pointless, aimless, purposeless acts of nature. Did the September day that changed the world change the aims or rhetoric of the scientists and educators […]
Are You Too Dumb to Understand Evolution?
September 10, 2008
Astrobiologist David Deamer believes that life can spontaneously emerge without design, but he thinks lay people are too uneducated to understand how this is possible, so he gives them the watered-down version of Darwin’s natural selection instead, which he knows is inadequate to explain the complexity of life. That’s what he seemed to be telling […]
Flightlessness Evolved Four Times
September 10, 2008
An article on Science Daily claims that the famous flightless birds – African ostriches, Australian cassowaries and emus, New Zealand kiwis and South American rheas – are unrelated. There was no flightless common ancestor. They lost their ability to fly independently, scientists say, because of “parallel evolution.” This would also mean that emus […]
Comet Conundrums Resist Bluffing
September 9, 2008
Scientists may claim they are learning about the origin of the solar system, but the fine print shows them scratching their heads. This is apparent in a couple of discoveries about comets this week. One Science Daily article is entitled, “Comets Throw Light On Solar System’s Beginnings.” Scientists at the UK’s national synchrotron […]
Modeling Just-So Stories for Earth History
September 8, 2008
Models are only simulations of reality. In science, they have a long history of simplifying complex physical phenomena in an attempt to understand them. Many times, empirical evidence can correct a model. The model then becomes a more accurate simulation, and can even provide additional insights and make predictions. Can modeling work for the unobservable, […]
Resurrecting Stalins Ghost
September 7, 2008
Most people feel there are certain historical figures off limits for praise. Hitler and Stalin are probably two of the most infamous. Believe it or not, a new Russian textbook is trying to portray Stalin in a more positive light. The UK Daily Mail reported that the textbook portrays the tyrant’s mass murders as “entirely […]
Butterfly Wings Xeroxed
September 6, 2008
If you can’t build it, copy it. Scientists have had a hard time reconstructing the photonic crystals that make butterfly wings shimmer with light (01/29/2003), so they made, in effect, a carbon copy. PhysOrg described how scientists at Penn State made impressions of the regularly-spaced geometric shapes from a butterfly wing and transferred it to […]
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