Margaret Sanger Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date March 15, 2021 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , African Americans, birth control, eugenics, feminism, history, infanticide, Margaret Sanger, Planned Parenthood, Racism, United States, women Don’t Remove Margaret Sanger from History — Condemn Her Wesley J. Smith March 15, 2021 Bioethics 3 A month dedicated to the history of any group should not just be a sanitized feel-good propaganda version of what came before. Read More ›
St. Patrick's Cathedral Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date December 8, 2019 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __edited, abortion, birth control, employment, First Amendment, freedom of religion, Islam, litigation, Roman Catholic Mission: To Eviscerate Freedom of Religion Wesley J. Smith December 8, 2019 Bioethics, Medicine 4 The only real difference between Robyn Pennacchia and me is that I believe in the entirety of the First Amendment and she does not. Read More ›
pious ape 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 23, 2019 CategoriesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , __k-review, adaptation, Africa, apes, atheism, BBC, birth control, bonobos, chimpanzees, Christians, church, communion, Darwinism, Easter, Eucharist, evolution, genetic fallacy, great apes, humans, Jane Goodall, jesus, last common ancestor, Mass, materialists, meals, monkeys, neocortex, On the Origin of Species, religion, savannah How Did Religion “Evolve”? Michael Egnor April 23, 2019 Neuroscience & Mind, Psychology 6 It’s telling that one kind of evolution always seems to be missing from these “theories” about the evolutionary origins of religion. Read More ›