on-off-buttons Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 1, 2021 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , amnesia, brain function, comatose, consciousness, Discovery Institute, dreams, drugs, ether, injury, machines, mechanical philosophy, Michael Egnor, Mind Matters, persistent vegetative state, phlogiston, sleep, unconsciousness, Walter Bradley Center Seven Reasons the Soul Can’t Be Turned “Off” David Klinghoffer February 1, 2021 Neuroscience & Mind 4 Neuroscientist Michael Egnor notes that the idea of consciousness is "empty," much like the idea of "natural selection" in evolution. Read More ›
mantid Type post Date October 22, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , bacteria, Darwinism, deception, drugs, Forensics, gravity, humans, Jerry Coyne, lying, Mount Rushmore, Nicholas Caputo, postmodernism, Return of the God Hypothesis, Royal Society, Stephen Meyer, torture, University of Portsmouth, Why Evolution Is True, William A. Dembski Design Filter Is Best Bet for Finding Liars Science and Culture October 22, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 Not all intelligent design is benevolent. Design can deceive. Can ID techniques filter the true from the false? Read More ›
medical research 2 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date July 9, 2020 CategoriesMedicine Tagged , Ann Reid, antibiotic resistance, antimalarial drugs, bacteria, Darwinism, doctors, drugs, Eugenie Scott, health, medical researchers, medicine, mutations, National Center for Science Education (NCSE), Nature (journal), pandemic, parasites, pathogens, public education, The Edge of Evolution, viruses Darwinism Would Fare Poorly Against Pandemics Casey Luskin July 9, 2020 Medicine 5 When combatting disease-causing pathogens, we don’t use the idea that Darwinian evolution is of unlimited creativity. Just the opposite! Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 1, 2018 CategoriesMedicine Tagged , __k-review, death, Death with Dignity, drug companies, drugs, Food and Drug Administration, fraud, health insurance, hospice, illness, law, medication, medicine, patients, stem cells The Downsides of “Right to Try” Wesley J. Smith June 1, 2018 Medicine 3 A lot of people are cheering the law enacted recently, which permits terminally ill people access to experimental drugs not yet approved by the FDA. Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 31, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, American Medical Association, assisted suicide, death certificate, democracy, doctors, drugs, euphemism, euthanasia, families, illness, law, lethal injection, lying, medicine, mercy killing, Minnesota, overdose, patients Forced to Lie About Assisted Suicide Wesley J. Smith May 31, 2018 Bioethics, Medicine 3 In its advocacy memes, the assisted-suicide movement often lies, prevaricates, spins, word engineers, and obfuscates. Read More ›
senior-male-researcher-carrying-out-scientific-research-in-a-52554426-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 28, 2015 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , bacteria, drugs, Health & Wellness, Jerry Coyne, limits of evolution, micromutations, Research, The Edge of Evolution, vestigial structures Does Medical Science Need Evolutionary Science? Casey Luskin May 28, 2015 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Medicine 5 In fighting antibiotic resistance, Darwin's theory actually provides little guidance. Read More ›