Hieronymus_Bosch_013-1 Type post Author John Zmirak Date September 4, 2025 CategoriesFaith & ScienceMetaphysicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abortion, americans, aneurysm, assisted suicide, atheism, brain, castration, child sacrifice, Christianity, culture, Denyse O’Leary, euthanasia, Heaven, immateriality, immortality, infinity, logic, materialism, materialists, mathematics, media, Michael Egnor, near-death experiences, neuroscience, neurosurgery, paganism, Pam Reynolds, Pam Reynolds Challenge, philosophy, physics, pornography, precision, sexual grooming, sexual mutilation, simplicity, St. Augustine, St. Bonaventure, St. Thomas Aquinas, surgeons, The Immortal Mind, tunnel, Western civilization Conversation with Dr. Egnor: Near-Death Experiences and Saving the Culture John Zmirak September 4, 2025 Faith & Science, Metaphysics, Neuroscience & Mind 9 "Near-death experiences (NDEs) are a huge and complex topic. Tens of millions of people have had NDEs and similar spiritual experiences." Read More ›
2560px-LargeBostonPublicGardenSketchbook-AWomanReadin Type post Author Peter Biles Date August 21, 2025 CategoriesCultural AnthropologyEvolution Tagged , adventure, art, beauty, betrayal, Beyond the Story, Christina Bieber Lake, death, duty, Englishmen, evolution, fiction, honor, human life, human nature, James Matthew Wilson, Kenneth Grahame, literature, love, machines, meaning, movies, philosophers, pornography, Roger Scruton, romance, scientism, social media, The Wind in the Willows, TV shows, universe, Wheaton College In a Materialistic Universe, Literature Doesn’t Make Sense Peter Biles August 21, 2025 Cultural Anthropology, Evolution 4 Some assume humanity’s longstanding appreciation for art, be it literary, visual, or musical, has evolutionary groundings. Read More ›
NGC-602 Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date December 22, 2024 CategoriesFine-tuningIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , Anthropic Principle, dark matter, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, International School of Advanced Studies, pornography, Steven Weinberg, Universe Today, University of California Physicists Want to Put Cosmic Design to the Test Denyse O’Leary December 22, 2024 Fine-tuning, Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 3 Their thesis is based on cosmic inflation theory and on the behavior of dark matter. Read More ›
Marks and Myers 2 Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 10, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , artificial intelligence, Arxiv.org, Baylor University, cats, ChatGPT, computer science, creativity, Denyse O'Leary, Dogs, gene pool, George Montañez, Harvey Mudd College, humans, inbreeding, large language models, Popular Mechanics, pornography, Robert J. Marks II, Walter Myers, William A. Dembski Must AI Inevitably Degenerate into Nonsense, through “Model Collapse”? Casey Luskin November 10, 2023 Bioethics, Neuroscience & Mind 6 AI works because humans are real creative beings, and AIs are built using gigantic amounts of diverse and creative datasets made by humans. Read More ›
Brian Miller Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 10, 2021 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , 1984 (novel), algorithms, Ann Gauger, Big Tech, Brian Miller, Casey Luskin, censorship, Center for Science and Culture, Darwin’s Cancel Culture, Darwinians, Emily Reeves, evolution, Evolution News, free speech, George Orwell, Günter Bechly, human origins, intelligent design, John West, Jonathan Wells, media, Michael Behe, Michael Denton, Ministry of Truth, peer-reviewed literature, pornography, scholars, Science Uprising, scientists, social media, Stephen Meyer, telescreen, thoughtcrime The Proles, the Party, and a Science Uprising David Klinghoffer November 10, 2021 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 5 Our tech rulers are quite the egalitarians. Sure, they believe that cheap entertainments for all have an important role. Read More ›
classroom 2 Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date June 14, 2019 CategoriesScience Education Tagged , __k-review, abiogenesis, acceptance, biological diversity, educators, ethnicity, evidence, evolution, evolutionary biologists, morality, peer-reviewed literature, pornography, religion, religious beliefs, science, Science Alert, science education, sensitivity, sex, students, teacher, terrorism, The Conversation, The Independent Should We Teach Evolution as a Sensitive Issue? Sarah Chaffee June 14, 2019 Science Education 3 That’s what priest and professor of science education Michael Reiss argues. Read More ›