data Type post Date August 6, 2025 CategoriesEthicsEvolutionNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , academic publishing, artificial inteligence, authorships, citations, government, John Sexton, misconduct, Moore’s law, Northwestern University, PNAS, publications, science, science fraud, science publishers, scientific literature, scientific process, stakeholders, standards, technology, trust Fraudulent Science Networks Outpace Legitimate Science Evolution News August 6, 2025 Ethics, Evolution, Neuroscience & Mind 3 "Before the public loses confidence in the scientific process"? Hasn't that train already left the station? Read More ›
doctor Type post Date February 27, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicineMetascience Tagged , artificial intelligence, California, chatbots, China, Elisabeth Bik, errors, Ethiopia, India, investigation, large language models, misconduct, mistakes, Nature (journal), Pakistan, physicians, Research, research integrity, research misconduct, researchers, Retraction Crisis, Saudi Arabia, universities China Leads the World in Retracted Science Papers Evolution News February 27, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine, Metascience 4 Seven of the Top Ten retraction hotspots are in China but India, Ethiopia, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia also make an appearance. Read More ›
climate change Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date December 4, 2023 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateGeologyIntelligent DesignScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , activists, Ann Gauger, cancel culture, censorship, climate change, ClimateGate, COVID-19, Denyse O'Leary, Evolution News, free speech, funding, global warming, intelligent design, Judith Curry, medicine, misconduct, Peter Biles, Wesley J. Smith Scientists Behaving Badly: Suppressing Intelligent Design Was Only the Start Guillermo Gonzalez December 4, 2023 Environment & Climate, Geology, Intelligent Design, Science Education, Scientific Freedom 4 The best that each of us can do to fight back is to continue educating as many people as possible. Read More ›
Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 27, 2016 CategoriesEthicsFaith & ScienceSociology Tagged , __tedited, culture, Eugenie Scott, harrassment, human behavior, Lawrence Krauss, misconduct, New Atheism, policy, religious beliefs, Richard Dawkins, Richard Dawkins Foundation, scientific culture, secularism, women You Might Think Twice Before Signing Up for a “Skeptics” Conference David Klinghoffer June 27, 2016 Ethics, Faith & Science, Sociology 3 Thoughtful reader Steve asks, "Do ID conferences ever have to post something like this?" Read More ›