MedaglionePalazzoTartara18 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date October 14, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEthicsMedicine Tagged , bioethics, Canada, Charles Camosy, consensus, doctors, George W. Bush, human life, Journal of Medical Ethics, lawyers, Leon Kass, medical ethics, moral tradition, Ontario, orthodoxy, patient choice, Paul Ramsey, philosophers, President’s Council on Bioethics, professors, progressive politics, public health, public policy, The Emerging Tradition of Secular Bioethics, tradition Contrary to Claims, Bioethics Is Not a “Moral Tradition” Wesley J. Smith October 14, 2025 Bioethics, Ethics, Medicine 5 Talk about a “heads we win, tails you lose” consensus that can drive Hippocratic physicians out of the profession. Read More ›
wheelchair Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date January 31, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , Connecticut, eyesight, gender ideology, Leon Kass, lifestyle, limbs, National Post, Quebec, transableism, transgenderism, Wesleyan University End of the Road for Radical Individual “Re-Creationism”? Not So Fast Wesley J. Smith January 31, 2023 Bioethics, Medicine 3 Transableism is a relatively new term for what is known as BIID, for “body integrity identity disorder.” Read More ›
discus throw Type post Author Michael Denton Date August 14, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , axon, central nervous system, heat, humans, intelligent design, Knut Schmidt-Nielsen, Leon Kass, mammals, muscles, myelin, nerve fibers, pain, sense organs, touch A Crucial Design Difference in Vertebrate Nerves Michael Denton August 14, 2020 Intelligent Design 6 Consideration of the basic characteristics of nerve impulse propagation suggests that the speed of conduction in mammals is close to the maximum possible. Read More ›