granite outcropping Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date February 16, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsHuman ExceptionalismMedicine Tagged , "chilling effect", anti-humanism, bioethicists, fauna, flora, Hong Kong, human thriving, humans, medical establishment, misanthropy, natural processes, nature rights, nihilism, prosperity, responsibilities, rights, rivers, speciesism, The Lancet World’s Oldest Medical Journal Endorses “Nature Rights” Wesley J. Smith February 16, 2023 Bioethics, Human Exceptionalism, Medicine 4 In other words, we, flora, fauna, and, indeed, geological features such as rivers and granite outcroppings are equal. Read More ›
microscope Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date July 30, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsCulture Tagged , Alzheimer’s disease, autism, biotechnology, brain, depression, fraud, funding, measles, peer review, public health, Research, Science (journal), serotonin, The Lancet, Vaccines Scientists Are Undermining Our Trust in Science Wesley J. Smith July 30, 2022 Bioethics, Culture 3 Falsification of scientific research has been a chronic problem for the sector in recent years. Read More ›
Science march Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 15, 2021 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , intelligent design, New England Journal of Medicine, researchers, scientists, skepticism, The Lancet “Trust the Scientists”? The World Catches Up with Intelligent Design David Klinghoffer June 15, 2021 Intelligent Design 2 There is no substitute for independent thinking about science, whether you hold a science PhD or not. Read More ›
coronavirus Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 4, 2020 CategoriesMedicineOrigin of Life Tagged , atheism, censorship, confirmation bias, coronavirus, COVID-19, Donald Trump, evolution, Evolution News, human evolution, human origins, Latin America, LinkedIn, macroevolution, malaria, materialism, medicine, Michael Behe, microevolution, The Guardian, The Lancet, The New England Journal of Medicine, World Health Organization Lancet Hydroxychloroquine Paper Scandal Illustrates Scientific Bias, Not Only in Medicine David Klinghoffer June 4, 2020 Medicine, Origin of Life 5 It’s a particularly crude example of how confirmation bias works — how else would you explain this story? — not only among lay people but among top researchers. Read More ›