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Reversible autopoiesis—a foundational design principle for life’s survival
Because cells have the ability to adapt to certain stresses, such as a lack of food, they must have been functioning that way from the start.
by Alex Williams
How reliable are genomes from ancient DNA?
When researchers assume fossils with DNA are a certain age, they are faced with the glaring contradiction that basic chemistry means DNA should not be present. 
by Brian Thomas and Jeffrey Tomkins
The four dimensional human genome defies naturalistic explanations
The human genome is the most complex computer operating system in the known universe and defies naturalistic explanations.
by Robert Carter
Human genome decay and the origin of life
Observed mutational decay in the human genome provides clues to the origin of life.
by Alex Williams
The myth of 1%
It has become dogma that human and chimp DNA is ‘only’ 1% different, but this is very, very wrong.
by Don Batten
No keeper’s brother
We hope you enjoy this sneak preview from the now-released December issue of Journal of Creation. Subscribers will be delighted by the powerful, stimulating content.
by Shaun Doyle
Human/animal hybrids: are they possible, and could they be saved?
Are human/animal hybrids a problem for Christianity, or even a possibility?
by Lita Sanders
The junk DNA myth takes a well-deserved hit
A review of The Myth of Junk DNA by Jonathan Wells.
by Jeffrey Tomkins
Critic ignores reality of Genetic Entropy
Can beneficial mutations outweigh destructive mutations? Creationist geneticist Dr John Sanford rebuts criticisms and accusations from a theistic evolutionist.
by John Sanford
Genomic monkey business—estimates of nearly identical human–chimp DNA similarity re-evaluated using omitted data
According to the latest data, this claim is vastly overestimated.
by Jeffrey Tomkins, Jerry Bergman
Human/chimp genome shock
Chimps and humans have similar genomes, right? Wrong! Just look at the Y chromosome.
by David Catchpoole
Time—no friend of evolution
‘Millions of years’ don’t help—in fact they make it worse.
by David Catchpoole