lake Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date April 13, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsScience Reporting Tagged , António Guterres, courts, development, Disney World, Elizabeth Kolbert, environmentalists, Florida, human rights, humankind, journalists, lakes, law, nature rights, Orange County, Orlando, radicals, The New Yorker, United Nations Nature Rights: A Lake in Florida Sues Wesley J. Smith April 13, 2022 Bioethics, Science Reporting 4 For a certain class of journalists, practical concerns are of little consequence — or perhaps, just not as much fun to write about. Read More ›
Origin-channel-unlabeled Type post Date August 30, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, C. elegans, calcium, cells, concentration gradient, Disney World, Douglas Axe, genetic code, Harvard University, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, intelligent design, ions, manganese, membrane channels, metabolism, mitochondrial membranes, molecular machines, Nature Communications, Parkinson’s disease, PNAS, selectivity filters, Undeniable (book), University of Massachusetts at Amherst Membrane Channels Show Astonishing Specificity Science and Culture August 30, 2018 Intelligent Design 7 The “selectivity filters” in membrane channels of living cells are able to discriminate between very similar molecules or atoms using complex mechanisms. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 10, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsTechnology Tagged , __k-review, Disney World, Internet, iPad, iPhone, John West, media, robot, Silicon Valley, toilet, Walt Disney, Walt Disney and Live Action, Washington Post On the Role of Technology in Culture, Walt Disney’s Ambivalence Is Still with Us David Klinghoffer January 10, 2018 Bioethics, Technology 3 Pulling kids away from mindless tweenybopper fare on the Disney Channel is a familiar routine in our home. Read More ›