Darwin Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 8, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , assisted suicide, bureaucrats, Canada, chemistry, Chronicles Magazine, cost-saving, culture, Darwinian materialism, death, Denyse O’Leary, epiphenomena, free will, human beings, John Zmirak, love, mental illness, Michael Egnor, mind, neurons, neuroscience, physics, random chance, soul, soullessness, The Immortal Mind, United States, veterans Darwinism’s “Simplest” and “Most Destructive Implication” David Klinghoffer September 8, 2025 Bioethics, Evolution, Neuroscience & Mind 2 Imagine that: killing as a “cost-saving strategy.” I think of Canada more and more as the haunted twin of the United States, and a warning to us. Read More ›
brain-mind-psychology-and-confusion-concept-art-3d-illustrat-583923905-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author John Zmirak Date August 28, 2025 CategoriesEthicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Aristotle, brain, careers, causation, Christof Koch, Denyse O’Leary, divorce, epiphenomena, families, free will, friendships, grants, human trafficking, jobs, livelihoods, machines, marriages, materialism, Michael Egnor, mind, moral responsibility, neuroscience, neuroscientists, neurosurgeons, philosophers, Plato, preference falsification, promotions, Saint Augustine, scientists, sexual abuse, soul, The Immortal Mind, theologians, worldview Conversation with Dr. Egnor: Are We Meat Machines, and Why Does It Matter? John Zmirak August 28, 2025 Ethics, Neuroscience & Mind 7 I found yours to be a fascinating and persuasive book on a crucial subject. You lay out the issues starkly. Read More ›