LucasCranach-DerJungbrunnenGemldegalerieBerlin Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date November 12, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , Bo Yang Wang, China, dead, Ezekiel Emanuel, Falon Gong, fetal farming, Fountain of Youth, Harvard Medical School, health, Immortal Dragons, Juan Ponce de León, life-extension, lifespan, longevity, New York Times, political prisoners, Singapore, transhumanism, uploaded, Vadim Gladyshev, well-being, Yip Tszho China Jumps on the Transhumanism Train Wesley J. Smith November 12, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine 4 It is said to be is devoting much energy and many resources to the life-extension project. Read More ›
Richard Lewontin Type post Author Paul Nelson Date July 6, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionEvolutionary PsychologyScience Tagged , ad hoc hypotheses, Darwinian theory, data, David Berlinski, fitness, genetics, Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, In Memoriam, Marxism, Minnesota, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Richard Lewontin, Suzanne Nelson, systematics, wisdom, Yiddish Richard Lewontin (1929-2021), Mensch Paul Nelson July 6, 2021 Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, Science 4 As I stood by the lab doorway, Lewontin — who was sitting right down front — looked back towards the door and caught my eye. Read More ›
pocket watch Type post Date September 16, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , blood pressure, chronotype variation, circadian clock, clocks, Cyanobacteria, Harvard Medical School, Japan, jet lag, Nature (journal), Nature Scientific Reports, neurons, PLOS ONE, PNAS, rats, sleep, suprachiasmatic nucleus, University of Illinois, University of Rochester, William Paley Design on Time — Paley’s Watch Was Inside Him Science and Culture September 16, 2020 Intelligent Design 8 Watches are everywhere on the heath. Look up, look down, look inside; biology runs on time. Read More ›
Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date November 29, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsMedicineTechnology Tagged , __k-review, Brave New World, China, Falun Gong, gene editing, genetic engineering, Harvard Medical School, He Jiankui, Hong Kong, Nobel Prize, Rod Dreher, Science (journal), scientists China Turns Against “Rogue” Gene Engineer Wesley J. Smith November 29, 2018 Bioethics, Medicine, Technology 3 Engaging in biotechnological and other medical research in China can free one from normal ethical concerns. Read More ›
1280px-BrownUniversity-UniversityHall Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 5, 2018 CategoriesScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, academic consensus, academic freedom, Brown University, Caroline Crocker, censorship, Darwinian theory, David Coppedge, Eric Hedin, gender dysphoria, Günter Bechly, Harvard Medical School, intelligent design, Lisa Littman, methodology, PLOS ONE, Quillette, Richard Sternberg, Scott Minnich Suppressing Science at Brown University David Klinghoffer September 5, 2018 Science Education, Scientific Freedom 8 Career anxiety is exactly how heterodox thought is policed and stamped out in the academic world. Read More ›
Zebrafish embryo Type post Date May 15, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, C. elegans, Cassini mission, development, DNA, Douglas Axe, Elizabeth Pennisi, embryo, evolution, functional whole, gene, Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, How to Build a Worm, intelligent design, ontogeny, Paul Nelson, RNA, science, University of Basel, worm, zebrafish, zygote Out of One Cell, Many Tissues — But How? Science and Culture May 15, 2018 Intelligent Design 10 Scientists are delving into the remarkable way a zygote grows through its embryonic stages to an adult. Read More ›