Zygote Type post Author Howard Glicksman Date June 27, 2024 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , Caltech, Cell (journal), cell membrane, embryo, Evolution News, father, glycolysis, Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, mother, newborn, oxygen, placenta, potassium, sodium, Steve Laufmann, The Scientist, University of Cambridge, uterus, Your Designed Body, zygote Let’s Think About a Zygote Like an Engineer Howard Glicksman June 27, 2024 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 Actually, life is a series of millions of hard problems that have to be solved all the time, or else. Read More ›
William Erasmus Darwin Type post Author Eric Hedin Date January 8, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryFaith & ScienceIntelligent Design Tagged , Abraham Lincoln, Alfred Tennyson, Benjamin Wiker, birth, Canceled Science, Charles Darwin, children, Christmas Eve, evolution, faith, future, Gettysburg Address, history, intelligent design, Kentucky, materialism, Napoleon, newborn, pregnancy, Prime Minister, providence, United States Design in the Grand Human Story Eric Hedin January 8, 2024 Biochemistry, Faith & Science, Intelligent Design 5 Two famous individuals who share the birthdate of February 12, 1809, are Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln. Read More ›
birth Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date October 20, 2023 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & MindPhilosophy Tagged , abortion, baby, birth, children, Christof Koch, consciousness, dreaming, fetuses, hard problem of consciousness, Integrated information theory, neuroscience, newborn, pregnancy, Robert Wright, synaptic connections, Thomas Nagel, Trinity College Dublin, unborn humans Consciousness May Occur Near Time of Birth Denyse O’Leary October 20, 2023 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy 4 Researchers generally stress that the unborn child’s brain is in a rapid, ongoing, and little understood state of development. Read More ›
baby Type post Author Michael Egnor Date May 10, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyEthicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Medical Association, cancer, children, conception, egg, embryo, human being, human life, law, National Academy of Sciences, newborn, parasite, public policy, scientists, settled science, sperm, womb, zygote Fact Check: Yes, Human Life Begins at Fertilization Michael Egnor May 10, 2022 Bioethics, Biology, Ethics, Medicine 4 So what are we to make of a scientific profession in which scientific experts consistently distort the science of human life? Read More ›
140318-F-TT327-009 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date July 5, 2018 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & MindPhilosophy Tagged , __k-review, Benjamin Libet, brain, Edward Feser, English literature, handicapped, Hannah Arendt, intelligence, materialism, medicine, Michael Egnor, middle school, neuroscience, newborn, patients, physician, soul, Thomas Aquinas, ultrasound, Wilder Penfield Neuroscientist Michael Egnor, the Philosophical Physician, on Science and the Soul David Klinghoffer July 5, 2018 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind, Philosophy 3 Try to read his essay through to the end without getting chills. Read More ›