EyeoftheBird Type post Author Kirk Durston Date November 25, 2025 CategoriesLife SciencesNeuroscience & MindPhysics Tagged , aneurysm, axioms, beliefs, blood, body, brain, brain hemispheres, C. S. Lewis, compatible free will, decision, emergence, falsification, free will, heart, illusion, immaterial mind, laws, laws of nature, libertarian free will, mathematics, Michael Egnor, mind, neurosurgery, physics, Sabine Hossenfelder, scientific method, scientific naturalism, scientists, surgery, thinking, truths A Close Look at Free Will: What Should Our Default Position Be? Kirk Durston November 25, 2025 Life Sciences, Neuroscience & Mind, Physics 23 The hypothesis that we have an immaterial mind capable of making free, meaningful decisions, continues to be verified. Read More ›
missing-link-1 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 22, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionPhilosophy Tagged , alt-right, anti-Semitism, axioms, Charles Murray, Compact, conservatism, crime, culture, Democrats, elections, eugenics, evolution, Evolution News, Holocaust, Human Zoos, John West, liberalism, neologisms, Nick Fuentes, policies, Politics, refrigerator, Republicans, Richard Hanania, Social Darwinists, Steve Sailer, United States “Eugenicons”? Call Them What They Are — Social Darwinists David Klinghoffer August 22, 2023 Bioethics, Evolution, Philosophy 5 It’s sad when once-useful words turn stale and disintegrate — like losing an old friend. Read More ›
bubbles Type post Author Robert J. Marks II Date April 26, 2021 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPhysics Tagged , assumptions, axioms, bubbles, Charles Darwin, incompleteness theorem, Kurt Gödel, Peter Atkins, scientific materialism, scientism, Stephen Hawking, Theory of Everything, William Lane Craig How Materialism Proves Unbounded Scientific Ignorance Robert J. Marks II April 26, 2021 Neuroscience & Mind, Physics 4 There is an infinite number of things that are true that we cannot prove scientifically and never will. Read More ›
1280px-Drosophila_melanogaster_Proboscis-1 Type post Author Richard Sternberg Date April 3, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionGenetics Tagged , __k-review, axioms, Carmen Sapienza, chromosomes, DNA, Drosophila melanogaster, euchromatin, Francis Crick, fruit flies, heterochromatin, junk DNA, Leslie Orgel, nucleus, organism, phenotype, repetitive sequences, Richard Dawkins, RNA, The Selfish Gene, transposable elements, W. Ford Doolittle, Y chromosome The “Why” of the Fly “Y”: Reflections on “Junk” DNA Richard Sternberg April 3, 2020 Evolution, Genetics 7 Let us give some thought to the Y chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster, that engaging fly which is the bond-servant of genetics. Read More ›