Jay_RIchards Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date August 21, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical SciencesScience Reporting Tagged , astronomers, Brian Keating, cosmologists, cosmos, earth, Earth-like planets, exoplanets, Guillermo Gonzalez, intelligent design, Jay Richards, Luke Barnes, Mars, orbit, Peter Robinson, reporters, science media, scientific discovery, Space.com, The Privileged Planet, Uncommon Knowledge Richards: The Most Earth-Like Planet Is Still … Mars David Klinghoffer August 21, 2024 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences, Science Reporting 3 With the discovery of large numbers of exoplanets in the last twenty years, does Earth look as privileged as it once did? Read More ›
Vintage_Panasonic_Table_Top_Transistor_Radio,_Model_R-8,_AM_Band,_6_Transistors,_Made_In_Japan,_Circa_1964_(49305570428) 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date April 15, 2024 CategoriesBiologyIntelligent DesignScience Reporting Tagged , America, commentators, Darwinian theory, diversity, English, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, irreducibly complex systems, Katherine Maher, media, Michael Behe, National Public Radio, News, radio, reporters, The Free Press, United States, viewpoint diversity “Irreducible Complexity” in the News David Klinghoffer April 15, 2024 Biology, Intelligent Design, Science Reporting 2 In a loose sense, America may be “irreducibly complex” but NPR sure is not. And “diverse”? America is, but NPR certainly isn’t. Read More ›
Salp Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 22, 2023 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , American Geophysical Union, atmosphere, California, carbon, carbon emissions, climate change, diatoms, foresight, global warming, habitability, jellyfish, NASA, Nature Communications, New Zealand, notochord, Penn State, phylogeny, plankton, polychaetes, providence, reporters, Science (journal), sea salps, sea squirts, silicate weathering, Southern California, Southern Ocean, thermostat, tunicates Meet the Ghostly Organisms that Rescue the Planet David Coppedge February 22, 2023 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Zoology 9 A man was paddleboarding last month when he came across a mysterious creature three miles off the shoreline of California. Read More ›
Elderly_Woman,_B&W_image_by_Chalmers_Butterfield Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date December 1, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , assisted suicide, caregivers, dehydration, elderly, euthanasia, hospice, reporters, starvation, suicide, Terri Schiavo, voluntary stop eating and drinking, VSED We Aren’t an Anti-Suicide Culture Anymore Wesley J. Smith December 1, 2022 Bioethics, Medicine 4 The assisted-suicide movement boosts suicide in many forms. One of the most insidious is known in euthanasia parlance as VSED. Read More ›
Max_Bruckner_-_Otto_Henning_-_Richard_Wagner_-_Final_scene_of_Gotterdammerung_-_crop Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date March 21, 2022 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionScience Reporting Tagged , biological complexity, biologists, City Journal, Cornelius Hunter, COVID-19, Darwinian processes, evolution, evolutionary biology, fraud, human nature, intelligent design, journalism, New York Times, Nicholas Wade, press release, propaganda, replication crisis, reporters, science writers, scientific papers, skepticism, viruses Why Are Science Reporters So Credulous? David Klinghoffer March 21, 2022 Biology, Evolution, Science Reporting 3 Most journalists who write about evolution appear to have made their choice to be flacks and toadies for the godlike biologists. Read More ›
Vorderkoerpertiefstellung_THWZ Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 19, 2018 CategoriesEthicsEvolution Tagged , __k-review, apes, Canis familiaris, cats, communication, Daily Mail, Dogs, Fox News, humans, mammals, New York Post, phylogeny, reporters, science, speech, United Kingdom This Is Science — Dog Study Confirms What Everyone Already Knew David Klinghoffer June 19, 2018 Ethics, Evolution 4 In contrast with apes, it’s a tougher sell to say that dogs share an ability to communicate with us because of being close evolutionary cousins. Read More ›