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What’s wrong with being wrong: a closer look at evolutionary ethics—part 1
Can naturalism ground real morality?
by Marc Kay
Leaving Darwin to go nowhere
Leaving Darwin to go nowhere?
by Lucien Tuinstra
The waiting time problem
Can mutations change an organism fast enough even over ‘evolutionary’ time?
by Don Batten
Dicynodonts and ‘out-of-place’ fossils
Giant mammal-like reptiles in the age of dinosaurs? Cretaceous dicynodont reclassified to Cenozoic mammal, otherwise it would be a proverbial Precambrian rabbit.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Photographing God’s creation
Wilderness adventurer and photographer Bill Boehm tells how nature reveals its creator
by Ron Neller
Over-engineering in nature: an evolutionary conundrum
Natural selection can only select for the attributes an organism needs to survive, so how is it that creatures are endowed with a whole lot more than necessary?
by David Catchpoole
Rails derail Darwinism
Flightlessness is devolution, not evolution.
by Matthew Cserhati
‘Evolution explains everything about life’
Grandiose claims by leading experts, for evolution’s power to explain ‘everything about life’, are ably combatted in a compelling new book, by 10 PhD scientists.
by Philip Bell
Academia and the press as the bad guys
A review of Spectacle: The astonishing life of Ota Benga by Pamela Newkirk Amistad, New York, 2015.
by Jerry Bergman
Social animals
Does a good society have evolutionary origins?
by Daniel Davidson
Origins questions led to career in genetics
Tasman Walker talks to Dr Peter Borger about biochemistry and the meaning of life
by Tas Walker
The conflict between conservation and Darwinian natural selection
Laudable conservation efforts are predicated on the belief that nature shouldn’t change over time, but this doesn’t sit well with the prevalent evolutionary belief that nature does change over time.
by Andrew Sibley