2560px-Sir_William_Quiller_Orchardson_-_Master_Baby_-_Google_Art_Project Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date March 28, 2025 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , adulthood, adults, babies, Columbia University, episodic memory, footsteps, hippocampal memories, hippocampus, infancy, infantile amnesia, Medical XPress, memory, Nick Turk-Browne, sci-fi, Science (journal), statistical learning, Tristan Yates, Yale University Why Don’t We Remember Being Babies? Denyse O’Leary March 28, 2025 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 3 If we were not conscious, we could hardly have learned all that we had to learn in those first few months of life. Read More ›
tennis Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date November 6, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsIntelligent DesignPhysics Tagged , Andrew McDiarmid, Ball State University, determinism, experience, free will, good, humans, ID the Future, infancy, intelligent design, laws of nature, morality, natural events, suffering, universe Eric Hedin on Free Will and Morality in an Intelligently Designed World Andrew McDiarmid November 6, 2023 Bioethics, Intelligent Design, Physics 2 As Hedin puts it, “The universe reveals who we are by allowing us to make free choices.” In other words, the ball is in our court. Read More ›
old person 2 Type post Author Geoffrey Simmons Date March 9, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMedicine Tagged , __edited, adolescence, aging, birth, bone cells, brain cells, conception, daughter cells, death, Doctor's Diary (series), dying, estrogen, growth hormones, infancy, liver cells, medical school, neurons, platelets, red blood cells, telomeres, testosterone Doctor’s Diary: On Designed Obsolescence Geoffrey Simmons March 9, 2020 Intelligent Design, Medicine 6 Dying actually begins at conception. From the moment of conception the directions for a person’s demise are passed on to every cell. Read More ›