Save the Planet Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date November 16, 2017 CategoriesBioethicsScience Reporting Tagged , __k-review, Africa, anti-humanism, Bill Nye, children, China, demographics, earth, electricity, environmentalism, family planning, global warming, Japan, murder, NBC News, one-child policy, population, prison, responsibility, The War on Humans, Travis Rieder, tyranny, Western Europe Environmentalism’s Worsening Anti-Human Infection Wesley J. Smith November 16, 2017 Bioethics, Science Reporting 4 Bioethicist Travis Rieder compares having a child to releasing a murderer from prison to kill again. Read More ›
human pair Type post Author Ann Gauger Date November 1, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionFaith & ScienceGeneticsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , __k-review, Abrahamic religions, Adam and the Genome, Africa, BioLogos, bottleneck, Dennis Venema, evolution, Francis Collins, heterozygosity, human origins, linkage disequilibrium, London, population genetics, population size, Queen Mary University, Richard Buggs, Trinity Western University Is a First Human Pair Possible or Impossible? Ann Gauger November 1, 2017 Evolution, Faith & Science, Genetics, Human Origins and Anthropology 11 Richard Buggs, Reader at Queen Mary University of London, is a well-respected geneticist, with numerous papers published in molecular ecology, genomics, and molecular evolution. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date April 28, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionZoology Tagged , __tedited, Africa, biodiversity, biogeography, biological origins, capuchin monkeys, circular causality, evolutionary assumptions, foxes, human agents, land mammals, monkeys, navigation, ocean, plausibility, rafting, rafting animals, scientific reasoning, Sherlock Holmes, South America, vegetation The Curious Incident of the Non-Rafting Foxes David Klinghoffer April 28, 2016 Evolution, Zoology 8 It should be the facts that drive startling conclusions, not the theory that's supposed to explain the facts. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date March 1, 2012 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLinguistics Tagged , __k-review, Africa, Andrew Breitbart, Center for Science and Culture, conservative, Politics, science Andrew Breitbart, 1969-2012 David Klinghoffer March 1, 2012 Intelligent Design, Linguistics 1 He earned the affection and gratitude of many conservatives for giving bullies on the Left a taste of their own medicine. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 29, 2012 CategoriesEvolutionLinguistics Tagged , __k-review, Africa, education, evolution, science, TEKS, Texas Not Out of Africa, or Not So Simply Anyway David Klinghoffer February 29, 2012 Evolution, Linguistics 1 An linguistic evolutionary fable unravels. Read More ›