World_Health_Organisation_headquarters,_Geneva,_north_and_west_sides_2007 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 14, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , Europe, funerals, hospitals, humanity, Israel, Palestinians, pandemic, public health, Richard Horton, skeptics, technocracy, The Lancet, World Health Organization Dehumanizing Skeptics of the “International Order” Wesley J. Smith June 14, 2024 Bioethics, Medicine 4 The people’s loss of “belief” was the natural consequence of the international system’s failing and betraying those it was designed to serve. Read More ›
Qafzeh Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 2, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , ancient Greeks, animals, anthropology, birds, death, Dogs, Eurasia, funerals, Homo naledi, humans, Iraq, Israel, Live Science, Neanderthals, Oxford University Press, paleontologists, Shanidar Cave, skeletons, South Africa, University of Arizona, Zagros Mountains When Did Humans Start Burying the Dead? Denyse O’Leary November 2, 2023 Bioethics, Human Origins and Anthropology 6 Only humans understand death as the inevitable and final reality for all mortal beings no matter what we do. Read More ›
robot Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date August 28, 2023 CategoriesFaith & ScienceNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Buddhism, Catholic clergy, Christianity, doubt, faith, funerals, Jerusalem Post, jesus, Journal of Experimental Psychology, Judaism, Kannon, King James Bible, Mindar, preachers, rabbis, sermons Are Robo-Pastors the Way of the Future? Denyse O’Leary August 28, 2023 Faith & Science, Neuroscience & Mind 5 They are certainly not the answer to declining attendance and involvement that some have hoped they would be. Read More ›