brain Type post Author Michael Egnor Date March 18, 2021 CategoriesLinguisticsMetaphysicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , blood, central nervous system, conjoined twins, DNA, ears, genes, heart, intelligent design, kidney, kidneys, lungs, neighbors, ribosomes, Robert White, soul, spinal cord Are Human Brain Transplants Even Possible? Michael Egnor March 18, 2021 Linguistics, Metaphysics, Neuroscience & Mind 6 I believe the intelligent design perspective may offer insight into the peculiar inability of central nervous system tissue to regenerate. Read More ›
Jeremy-England Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 7, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignOrigin of LifePhysics Tagged , __edited, academia, academic freedom, assisted suicide, atheism, authority, Brian Miller, Caroline Crocker, Charles Marshall, Commentary, coronavirus, COVID-19, Dan Brown, Darwinism, David Coppedge, David Gelernter, Douglas Axe, Edmond Kirsch, Energy, Eric Hedin, fluctuation theorems, Georgia Institute of Technology, Günter Bechly, Harold Morowitz, Inference (journal), intelligent design, James Tour, Jeremy England, Justin Brierly, Keith Fox, Lee Cronin, Martin Gaskell, MIT, neighbors, Orthodox Jews, Rice University, Richard Sternberg, Scott Minnich, second of law thermodynamics, Stephen Meyer, The Mystery of Life’s Origin, Unbelievable, unemployment, University of Glasgow, University of Southampton Courage, Courtesy, and the Origin of Life — Congratulations to Physicist Jeremy England David Klinghoffer May 7, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Origin of Life, Physics 7 As Yale’s David Gelernter has said of Darwinism, to challenge it is to “take your life in your hands.” Read More ›
mask 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date March 23, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, “selfish gene”, atheism, coronavirus, creator, David Bentley Hart, evil, families, good, humanity, innocents, Moral Law, natural selection, neighbors, pandemic, Richard Dawkins, suffering, theodicy To Ask “Where Is God in This Pandemic?” Is to Acknowledge that God Exists Michael Egnor March 23, 2020 Bioethics, Faith & Science 3 The problem of theodicy is real, of course. We don’t always know or understand God’s ways. Read More ›
White House Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date May 6, 2019 CategoriesScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , __k-review, academic freedom, Center for Science and Culture, Federal Government, Free Science, free speech, neighbors, officials, public education, states, Student Academic Freedom in Science resolution, universities Free Speech on Campus: Considering State and Federal Action Sarah Chaffee May 6, 2019 Science Education, Scientific Freedom 4 There is no easy fix here. The President’s signature on a piece of paper won’t restore open inquiry on campuses. Read More ›