Rosetta Stone Type post Date February 11, 2024 CategoriesEvolutionNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Anthony Esolen, Arabic, artificial intelligence, books, brains, Chinese, Discover Magazine, Dutch, editors, English, evolution, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, languages, linguists, materialist theories, Miami, quantum physics, Scientific American, software, Spanish, writers Top Five Questions on the Origin of Language — Answered! Science and Culture February 11, 2024 Evolution, Neuroscience & Mind 6 We aren’t even sure which is the world’s oldest spoken language, though Hebrew, Arabic, and Chinese have impressively long histories. Read More ›
Odometer Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date July 18, 2019 CategoriesAstronomyPhysical Sciences Tagged , __edited, Apollo moon landings, earth, Earth’s crust, fossil fuels, galaxies, Hubble Space Telescope, humans, hydrogen, intelligent design, interstellar travel, kerosene, Miami, Milky Way, minerals, Moon, oxygen, perfect solar eclipses, satellite TV, Saturn V, solar system, stars Remembering the First Manned Moon Landing at 50; What Does the Future Hold? Guillermo Gonzalez July 18, 2019 Astronomy, Physical Sciences 7 I remember watching the Apollo moon landings on TV from 1969 to 1972 as a child. Read More ›
Embrace-Evidence Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date April 15, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEnvironment & ClimateEvolutionScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Bill Nye, Darwinian evolution, elections, evidence, global warming, March for Science, Miami, Minneapolis, science, Scientific American, scientist, UC Berkeley Marching for Evidence? Jonathan Wells April 15, 2018 Biology, Environment & Climate, Evolution, Scientific Freedom 3 Imagine yourself as a graduate student doing research in one of the natural sciences. Read More ›