truck driver 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date March 19, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, China, coronavirus, DDT, deplorables, eugenics, evolution, feces, globalism, gun control, Holocaust, homelessness, Los Angeles, malaria, medicines, Michael Egnor, overpopulation, pandemic, pharmaceutical industry, plague, quarantine, San Francisco, Seattle, Steven Novella, supermarket, tuberculosis, typhoid fever, Yale University Science Expert Slaps the “Anti-Intellectuals,” Again Michael Egnor March 19, 2020 Bioethics, Medicine 7 I stopped by Joe the truck driver’s house to talk. Joe read Yale neurologist Steven Novella’s essay, and he didn’t think much of it. Read More ›
truck driver 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date March 3, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , __edited, AIDS, babies, climate change, conception, Darwinists, DDT, eugenics, evolution, fossil fuels, gender, global cooling, global warming, Jeffrey Epstein, life, malaria, materialism, men, Paul Ehrlich, polar bears, schoolchildren, schools, scientists, skeptics, Steven Novella, truck driver, women, Yale University Is Joe Blow “Anti-Intellectual”? Michael Egnor March 3, 2020 Evolution 7 Joe wonders how a scientist could be so wrong and still keep his job. Read More ›
apocalypse Type post Author Michael Egnor Date September 25, 2019 CategoriesEngineeringEvolution Tagged , __edited, “consensus science”, Britain, climate change, Darwinian evolution, DDT, global warming, Ice Age, Jeffrey Epstein, penicillin, Siberia Apocalypse Now — More Things Scientists Would Like You to Forget Michael Egnor September 25, 2019 Engineering, Evolution 3 We must never confuse scientific consensus with science. Science is inquiry. Consensus is cloture of inquiry. Read More ›
ocean-no-humans Type post Author Michael Egnor Date December 19, 2018 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , __k-review, climate change, DDT, earth, extinction, Führer, Gaia, global cooling, humans, junk science, morality, nature, New York Times, ocean Would Human Extinction Be Immoral? Michael Egnor December 19, 2018 Bioethics 5 The oceans might be cleaner without man, but they would neither know nor care nor judge. Read More ›
thoughtful 2 Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date May 18, 2018 CategoriesEvolutionScience Education Tagged , __k-review, acceptance, americans, bats, biologists, Bioscience, Darwinian theory, Darwinists, DDT, Dogs, Douglas Axe, education, evolution, Galápagos Islands, Jonathan Wells, Lehigh University, Michael Behe, mosquitos, paleontologists, peer-reviewed literature, public education, Richard Dawkins, science, survey, Texas, UC Berkeley, University of Cambridge For Selling Evolution, a Little Knowledge Is a Glorious Thing Jonathan Witt May 18, 2018 Evolution, Science Education 13 Many Americans reject evolution, a recent paper suggests, because they’re uninformed. Read More ›