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Intelligent Design the Future

Can Darwinian Evolution Be Rescued From Dogma?

Intelligent Design the Future

Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture

Science, Philosophy, Astronomy, Society & Culture, Life Sciences

4993 Ratings

🗓️ 22 July 2024

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If there's anything left to salvage from the Neo-Darwinian theory of life's origins, it must first be rescued from dogma. On this episode of ID The Future, host Casey Luskin begins a conversation with two distinguished PhD scientists who are asking tough questions of Neo-Darwinism: Olen Brown, Professor Emeritus of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Missouri, and David Hullender, Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Texas, Arlington. Luskin unpacks three recent scientific papers written by Brown and Hullender warning that Neo-Darwinism must be updated if it has any hope of surviving as a theory. This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation. Source

Transcript

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0:00.0

I.

0:13.4

I'm Casey Luskin and we have a very interesting podcast of you today with two

0:18.4

scientists who have published multiple peer-reviewed papers that are critical of

0:22.4

Neo-Darwinism and even sympathetic potentially

0:25.2

to intelligent design arguments.

0:27.4

So I'd like to welcome professors Olin Brown and David Hollander to the show.

0:31.6

Olin and David, great to have you guys with us.

0:34.8

Thank you.

0:35.8

It's good to be here.

0:36.8

Olan Brown holds a PhD in microbiology from the University of Oklahoma Norman.

0:41.6

He is Professor Emeritus of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Missouri with appointments

0:46.9

including the John M Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center, the Graduate School, and the

0:52.2

School of Medicine.

0:53.2

He's done research on the chemistry, biology, and medical uses of oxygen and

0:57.6

pre-radical mechanisms of toxicity and oxygen stress physiology and biological defense mechanisms.

1:05.0

He's been a fellow of the American Chemical Institute,

1:08.0

the National Certification Commission,

1:10.0

the American Institute of Chemists,

1:12.0

and the American Board of Forensic Examiners.

1:14.4

David Hollander holds a PhD in Mechanical Engineering from MIT

1:19.0

and he is Professor Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering

1:22.2

at the University of Texas Arlington where he has worked for over five decades

...

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