Lucretia_committing_suicide Type post Author Richard Weikart Date August 19, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Aristotle, Australia, Christianity, disabilities, happiness, Hebrews, Hippocratic Oath, human life, infanticide, Jews, Judeo-Christian tradition, Melbourne, physicians, Plato, Plutarch, poison, Pythagoras, Socrates, Stoics, The Republic Life Devalued: Suicide and Infanticide in Classical Antiquity Richard Weikart August 19, 2024 Bioethics, Medicine 13 Nick Vujicic’s story would probably have turned out quite differently if he had been born in ancient Greece or Rome. Read More ›
Bees Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 11, 2018 CategoriesLinguisticsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __k-review, abstract thought, Adrian Dyer, animals, Aristotle, artificial intelligence, Australia, dog, food, honeybees, humans, Melbourne, neurons, nothing, researchers, universals, visual cortex, zero Can Bees Understand the Concept of “Zero”? Michael Egnor June 11, 2018 Linguistics, Neuroscience & Mind 6 The scientists credited the bees with more intelligence than some humans. Read More ›
Type post Date November 13, 2017 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife SciencesScience Tagged , __k-review, Arthur C. Clarke, Australia, biosphere, coincidences, earth, fire, greenhouse gas, ID the Future, life, Melbourne, Michael Denton, organisms, oxygen, ozone, photosynthesis, planet, podcast, spontaneous combustion, The Wonder of Water, water Remarkable Coincidences in Photosynthesis Science and Culture November 13, 2017 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences, Science 1 From the specific energy of visible light to the unique properties of water, this degree of improbability screams DESIGN. Read More ›