MuseoPachamama05 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date September 25, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & ScienceHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , advocacy, Cherokee, dams, earth goddess, environmental public policies, flowing, Great Lakes, Harvard Climate Action Week, Harvard Kennedy School, human harm, indigenous knowledge, intelligentsia, nature rights, neo-pagan mysticism, Pachamama, rivers, water Nature Right Pushes Neo-Pagan Mysticism at Highest Academic Levels Wesley J. Smith September 25, 2025 Bioethics, Faith & Science, Human Exceptionalism 3 Most recently, the Harvard Kennedy School hosted a symposium on “nature rights” undergirded by “indigenous knowledge.” Read More ›
bioethics-and-medical-ethics-discussions-stockpack-adobe-sto Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 13, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, advocacy, American Journal of Bioethics, assisted suicide, bioethicists, bioethics, climate change, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI), gender ideology, hospitals, medical school, medicine, patients, Paul Ramsey, policy, United Nations, utilitarianism Bioethics Becomes Just Another Social-Justice Political Movement Wesley J. Smith May 13, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine 4 A new study illustrates how bioethics is not (and, indeed, never has been) an area of objective professional expertise. Read More ›
Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date May 6, 2016 CategoriesFaith & ScienceLegal Science (jurisprudence)Science Education Tagged , __tedited, advocacy, antireligious, Casey Luskin, constitutionality, courts, double standard, Edwards v. Aguillard, fundamentalism, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, mandates, McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education, neutrality, politicization, public school, religious liberty, separation of church and state, Tree of Life In Court Rulings on Teaching Origins Science, Law Review Article Finds a Double Standard Sarah Chaffee May 6, 2016 Faith & Science, Legal Science (jurisprudence), Science Education 4 Courts typically ignore anti-religious historical associations with Darwinism. Read More ›