Spider-Man Type post Author Peter Biles Date April 14, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , Big Science, Elon Musk, entertainment, evolution, film, movies, Neuralink, New York City, parasite, Sam Altman, Spider-Man, transhumanism Science Gone Wrong, Thanks to a Hasty Transhumanist Peter Biles April 14, 2024 Bioethics, Evolution 4 “40,000 years of evolution and we’ve barely even tapped the vastness of human potential." Read More ›
Doctor examining pregnant woman Type post Author Michael Egnor Date September 12, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyMedicine Tagged , abortion, conception, Darwinists, DNA, egg, intelligent design, parasite, personhood, pregnancy, PZ Myers, sentience, sperm, womb Biologist P. Z. Meyers Denies That Life Begins at Conception Michael Egnor September 12, 2022 Bioethics, Biology, Medicine 3 Obviously, life begins at conception. With the fusion of the sperm and the egg, a new human life begins. 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 ›
Plasmodium falciparum Type post Author Michael Behe Date September 30, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionMedicine Tagged , Darwin Devolves, devolution, elephants, Ethiopia, evolution, First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, genes, malaria, Nature Microbiology, parasite, Plasmodium falciparum Devolution Watch: Malaria Gnaws Off a Leg Michael Behe September 30, 2021 Evolution, Medicine 3 The most frequently used diagnostic test kit checks for the presence in the patient’s blood of either of two similar malarial proteins, called pfhrp2 or pfhrp3. Read More ›
womb Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 20, 2019 CategoriesBioethicsEthicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, abortion, American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Medical Association, cancer, debate, egg, embryo, evolution, fertilization, fetus, gravity, human life, ideology, law, Leonardo da Vinci, National Academy of Sciences, parasite, public policy, science, scientists, sperm What the Abortion Debate Tells Us About Integrity in Science Michael Egnor June 20, 2019 Bioethics, Ethics, Medicine 4 Science has quite a bit to contribute to our debate about abortion as a matter public policy. Read More ›