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Page 2 of 5 (49 Articles)
Genetic entropy: The silent killer
A devastatingly powerful argument against evolution
by Paul Price
The human genome is amazingly complex
The genome is not simple. It is a hyper-sophisticated information processing system that cannot be explained by the Darwinian descent-with-modification idea.
by Robert Carter
Many paths lead to high-altitude adaptation
Discover how many paths lead to it.
by Jean K. Lightner
More evidence for the reality of genetic entropy—update
Did the 1918 Spanish Flu virus really go extinct, as genetic entropy predicted?
by Robert W. Carter
The mysterious alien tablet
Delving into DNA’s mind-blowing, multi-layered information system
by Dom Statham
Do mutations add information?
Mutations can add information, so why is that not evolution?
by Joel Tay
A 'genealogical' Adam and Eve?
A new model that claims Adam and Eve can be the genealogical ancestors, but not the genetic ancestors, of all people alive today, after people evolved from apes, fails all biblical tests.
by Robert Carter and John Sanford
Do koalas prove that humans got part of their DNA from viruses?
Koalavirus likely not example of invasive genetic element but rather part of the genome’s overall design.
by Matthew Cserhati
Effective population sizes and loss of diversity during the Flood bottleneck
How much genetic diversity did humanity lose because of Noah’s Flood?
by Robert W. Carter
Were stem cell-like organisms the first forms of life?
Stem cell-like ancestors of sponges only make early life more complex, and the probability of evolution less likely.
by Matthew Cserhati
Were Neanderthals pre-Flood?
A questioner asks: Did Neanderthals live before the Flood?
by Robert Carter
The myth of ape-to-human evolution
Just because ape-to-human evolution is popular doesn’t make it plausible.
by Peter Line