John C. Sanford is an American plant geneticist, and an advocate of intelligent design and young earth creationism.
Education
Sanford graduated in 1976 from the University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Science in horticulture. He went to the University of Wisconsin–Madison where he received an Master of Science in 1978 and a Doctor of Philosophy in 1980 in plant breeding/plant genetics.
Career
Academic career
Between 1980 and 1986 Sanford was an assistant professor of Horticultural Sciences at Cornell University, and from 1986 to 1998 he was an associate professor of Horticultural Science. Although retiring in 1998, Sanford continues at Cornell as a courtesy associate professor He held an honorary Adjunct Associate Professor of Botany at Duke University.
Sanford has published over 70 scientific publications in peer reviewed journals.
Inventions
Sanford is a prolific inventor with more than 32 issued patents. He is the co-inventor of the Pathogen-derived Resistance (Pakistan Development Review) process and the co-inventor of the genetic vaccination process.
He was given the "Distinguished Inventor Award" by the Central New York Patent Law Association in 1990 and 1995. He has founded two biotechnology companies, Sanford Scientific and Biolistics.
In 1998 he retired on the proceeds from the sale of his biotech companies, and continued at Cornell as a courtesy associate professor
Genetic Entropy & the Mystery of the Genome
Sanford has argued for devolution in his book Genetic Entropy & the Mystery of the Genome (2005, 2008). He summarized all evolutionary major population models in the Appendix. Mendel"s Accountant
Sanford and colleagues developed the quantitative forward genetic modeling program Mendel"s Accountant, publishing several papers on it and genetic entropy in peer review.
Based on this research, Sanford holds that the human genome is deteriorating, and therefore could not have evolved through a process of mutation and selection as specified by the modern evolutionary synthesis.
According to his own words, he did not fully reject Darwinian evolution until the year 2000. An advocate of intelligent design, Sanford testified in 2005 in the Kansas evolution hearings on behalf of intelligent design, during which he denied the principle of common descent and "humbly offered.. that we were created by a special creation, by God".
He stated that he believed the age of the Earth was "less than 100,000" years. Sanford uses an analogy to illustrate evidence of design - that of a car versus a junkyard: "A car is complex, but so is a junkyard.
However, a car is complex in a way that is very specific — which is why it works.
Dembski endorsed Sanford"s book Genetic Entropy & the Mystery of the Genome.