squirrel Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date June 27, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , animals, arthritis, birds, children, emotional contagion, emotions, folklore, hermit crabs, horses, inequality, mammals, New York Times, pigs, privilege, reality, Salon, social justice, squirrels, The College Fix, World Economic Forum Check Their Privilege: Are Squirrels Socially Unjust? Denyse O’Leary June 27, 2022 Bioethics, Neuroscience & Mind 5 Researchers have long assumed that people think like animals. But now we see that the equation reads the same in reverse: animals think like people. Read More ›
Richard Spencer Type post Author Richard Weikart Date July 11, 2018 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionEvolutionary PsychologyPsychology Tagged , __k-review, alt-right, anti-Semitism, Darwinian theory, Europeans, From Darwin to Hitler, history, inequality, James Watson, Jews, Kevin MacDonald, Nazism, neo-Nazism, Nobel Prize, Racism, Richard Spencer, Steven Pinker Evolutionary Psychology Grapples with Racism and Anti-Semitism Richard Weikart July 11, 2018 Bioethics, Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, Psychology 3 Kevin MacDonald is trying to resurrect this troubling legacy of Darwinian theory. Read More ›