mind Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date October 19, 2023 CategoriesHuman Origins and AnthropologyNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abortion, Africa, Casey Luskin, consciousness, evolutionary biology, fish, flatworm, fossil record, gestation, Gregory Chaitin, hominins, human intelligence, human mind, human origins, Israel, meat, mollusks, mussels, Neanderthals, pain, poetry, pseudoscience, tools The Human Mind Has No History Denyse O’Leary October 19, 2023 Human Origins and Anthropology, Neuroscience & Mind 5 There is no good reason to assume that human intelligence evolved from mud to mind via a long slow history. Read More ›
Mar Menor Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date October 8, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsCultureEvolution Tagged , environmental law, Erin O’Donnell, evolution, geological features, guardians, lawsuits, mussels, nature rights, personhood, regulations, Science (journal), Spain, University of Melbourne Spanish Lagoon Granted Right to “Evolve” Wesley J. Smith October 8, 2022 Bioethics, Culture, Evolution 2 The “nature rights” movement continues to spread — with little resistance because people don’t take it seriously. Read More ›