Science and Culture Today Discovering Design in Nature
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brain damage

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Image credit: EC Tech - Adobe Stock.

Dr. Michael Egnor on His Own Spiritual Journey

His personal story, including a profound experience in a hospital chapel during a family crisis, became a turning point that challenged his atheism. Read More ›
brain
Photo credit: BXu99, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.

“Multiple Minds” in Split-Brain Patients?

The scientific obsession with “split minds” is an artifact of our materialist preconceptions about neuroscience. Read More ›
cave-painting
Photo: “Tree of Life,” a cave painting from Borneo, Indonesia, by Lhfage at English Wikipedia [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons.

Do We Need Language to Think?

For a long time, it was only a philosophical issue: Plato saw thinking as a conversation with oneself. Read More ›
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Photo credit: elaine Alex via Unsplash.

Pig Brains Thought Dead May Be Revived

Pigs are considered useful biomedical models for humans so the implications of such studies sent waves through the field of resuscitation — and bioethics. Read More ›
memory
Photo credit: Anita Jankovic via Unsplash.

Memories Are Not “Stored” in the Brain; Here’s Why

It doesn’t make any sense to talk about the “storage” of non-physical entities. Philosophers like to call that a "category error." Read More ›
hand in mirror 2
Photo credit: Shoeib Abolhassani via Unsplash.

Same-Handed Molecules Are an “Overarching Design Principle” in Life, Say Researchers

Without foresight to solve heterochiral incidents, a primordial cell would quickly perish even if, against all odds, it began homochiral.  Read More ›

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