covid Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date December 3, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsNeuroscience & MindScience Reporting Tagged , brain, censorship, education, fact-checking, John Horgan, lying, materialism, misinformation, Nature (journal), propaganda, Richard Dawkins, scientific reliability, scientists, The Conversation, trust, trust in scientists, universe Should Scientists Lie to Us for Our Own Good? Denyse O’Leary December 3, 2023 Bioethics, Neuroscience & Mind, Science Reporting 5 People suspect that we are being conned about a lot of things. How would an accepted, admitted policy of conning us not make it worse? Read More ›
COVID-19 Type post Author Peter Biles Date November 17, 2022 CategoriesCultureScientific Freedom Tagged , Australia, censorship, COVID-19, doctors, economics, Facebook, fact-checking, free speech, government, health, Israel, LinkedIn, masks, media, misinformation, orthodoxy, pandemic, Politics, researchers, scientists, social distancing, social media, The Atlantic, Twitter Science Journal Recognizes the Reality of COVID Censorship Peter Biles November 17, 2022 Culture, Scientific Freedom 5 A peer-reviewed article uncovers how medical professionals were silenced for their views on the pandemic. Read More ›
blindness Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 22, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent DesignScience Reporting Tagged , __nedited, Cambrian Explosion, complexity, Darwinism, fact-checking, Gerd Müller, intelligent design, Kevin Williamson, National Review, Neo-Darwinism, novelty, peer-reviewed, peer-reviewed literature, University of Vienna Self-Induced Blindness: Round 3 with Kevin Williamson David Klinghoffer January 22, 2019 Intelligent Design, Science Reporting 3 Of course, an allergy to conceding error is not unique to ID opponents, but it is typical of them. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date October 26, 2016 CategoriesScientific ReasoningScientific Trustworthiness Tagged , __tedited, ad hominem, critical thinking, fact-checking, Jason Rosenhouse, logical fallacies, popular opinion Darwinism and “Astroturf” David Klinghoffer October 26, 2016 Scientific Reasoning, Scientific Trustworthiness 4 Here's a helpful concept from investigative journalist Sharyl Attkisson. Read More ›