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Evolutionary Theory of Aging: Light or Shadow?

Life is the only phenomenon we know that continually resists decay.

Your Genome Has a Guardian

As we learn more about the genome, it becomes increasingly clear that it did not evolve, but was designed.

SCT: Even Loose Proteins Show Design

So-called "disordered proteins" that don't fold into compact forms show design for function.

Tiny Birds, Big Evolutionary Claims

A discussion moves beyond adaptation itself to broader claims about speciation and evolutionary diversification.

Genes Tell No Tales About Language Evolution

The better we understand the machinery of life, the more intricate it becomes – and the more the evolutionary narrative begins to look like a theoretical jury-rigging.

How to Build a Tiny Moss Leaf

The Creator's handiwork shines through the details.

Why Crabs Walk Sideways

Evolutionary scientists admit to finding “no intermediates” in crab locomotion. It originated once.

The Nematode Roars “Design!”

Secularists are forced to deny reality itself in a desperate attempt to rescue their failing institutional faith.

Cells Have a “Hail Mary” Strategy to Minimize Damage

Living cells are equipped with extraordinarily sophisticated, energy-intensive systems designed primarily to suppress mutations.

Evolutionists Rethink Randomness of Mutations

Some evolutionists attempt to modify the long-standing view that random mutation is the foundational mechanism in evolutionary theory.

Why Evolution Cannot Be Invoked Before Life Exists

The attempt to explain the integrated whole in terms of its primitive parts remains, quite literally, outside the realm of science.

DNA Translation Is Context-Dependent

What initially appeared to be a straightforward system has proven to be an extraordinarily complex and highly regulated network.

How a Cell Prepares for Division

At this scale, the cell does not appear to be reacting. It appears to be operating with a framework in which structure, timing, and function are tightly integrated.

Genes Tell Time with Help from ‘Junk’ DNA

We don't sense time as an external arrival. We inhabit it as an internal necessity.

Cells Use ‘Disordered’ Proteins to Control Access to the Nucleus

Scientists watching the nuclear pore in action discover that its moving protein filaments form a highly selective traffic control system.
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