Harvard Museum of Natural History Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date December 17, 2023 CategoriesBiologyScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , academia, administrators, Andrew McDiarmid, CNN, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI), gender, genocide, Harvard University, historians, humanities, ID the Future, intelligent causes, methodological naturalism, methodological pluralism, Michael Keas, MIT, Monopoly, natural causes, Peggy Noonan, podcast, professors, race, scholars, silver lining, tenure, testimony, universities, University of Pennsylvania, Wall Street Journal, woke ideology, worldview Recognizing the Scandal in the Universities — Will It Extend to Origins Science? David Klinghoffer December 17, 2023 Biology, Science Education, Scientific Freedom 4 The regime of methodological naturalism is affirmative action for scientific ideas. Read More ›
christopher-campbell-h9Rx3zOYZws-unsplash Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date November 1, 2023 CategoriesFaith & ScienceNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , blindness, death, faith and science, Gary Habermas, Heaven, home, ID the Future, Minding the Brain, near-death experiences, podcast, scientific evidence, testimony The Scientific Evidence for Near-Death Experiences Andrew McDiarmid November 1, 2023 Faith & Science, Neuroscience & Mind 2 Personal testimony about other realms can’t be independently corroborated, but objective evidence rooted in this world can be confirmed and evaluated. Read More ›
illusion 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date October 18, 2018 CategoriesNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , __k-review, amygdala, Anil Seth, brain, consciousness, Discovery Institute, emotions, hallucination, hippocampus, illusion, materialism, Michael Egnor, Mind Matters, mood, neuroscience, psychologist, Psychology Today, skull, soul, TED talk, testimony, The Conversation, thought, U.S. Senate, University of Sussex, Walter Bradley Center A Strange Way of Speaking About the Brain David Klinghoffer October 18, 2018 Neuroscience & Mind 5 A peculiar habit of disassociation is widespread among many who study the brain. Read More ›