3d-rendering-of-a-dark-cell-at-night-stockpack-adobe-stock-347292952-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date March 21, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsPsychologySociology Tagged , anxiety, college students, crying, Office of Naval Research, persistent scientific errors, prisoners, psychologists, public policy, Retraction Crisis, Retraction Watch, self-correcting, social psychology, Stanford University, University of Calgary Retract the Stanford Prison Experiment? Denyse O’Leary March 21, 2025 Bioethics, Psychology, Sociology 7 Beware of wildly popular sociology that tells us that our public policy preferences are somehow embedded in human nature. Life was never as simple as that. Read More ›
Cuttlefish Type post Author Daniel Witt Date March 6, 2024 CategoriesEngineeringEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , biologists, Brian Miller, Cambridge University, camouflage, cuttlefish, Darwinian mechanisms, fitness landscapes, Irreducible Complexity, MIT, mutations, NBC, Office of Naval Research, probabilistic resources, reverse-engineering, skin, Systems Biology, Washington Post Yet Another Engineering Innovation from Cuttlefish Daniel Witt March 6, 2024 Engineering, Evolution, Intelligent Design 5 It was never a given that when scientists looked deeper into life, they would find such exquisite designs; but they did. Read More ›
ozzie Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 12, 2017 CategoriesEvolutionLife SciencesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , __k-review, Dogs, Emory University, evolution, Office of Naval Research, Research Defense Department-Funded Study Finds that Dogs Relish Praise and Hot Dogs David Klinghoffer September 12, 2017 Evolution, Life Sciences, Neuroscience & Mind, Psychology 4 This is indeed cutting-edge research. Given that, did you wonder if they’d bring evolution into it? Of course they do. Read More ›