DarwinTomb Type post Date January 14, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEnvironment & ClimateEvolution Tagged , activists, billionaires, Charles Darwin, coal, environmentalism, evolution, extinction, gas, humans, Reuters, The Last Supper, Westminster Abbey In Unexpected Attack, Activists Deface Charles Darwin’s Tomb Science & Culture January 14, 2025 Bioethics, Environment & Climate, Evolution 3 Activists with Just Stop Oil seem to be attempting to enlist Darwin’s modern-day followers in their environment cause. Read More ›
Boxing_gloves_Bail_10-OZ_2 Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date August 13, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsEvolutionGeneticsScientific Freedom Tagged , boxing, Canada, censorship, chromosomes, evolutionary biologists, Facebook, free speech, Jerry Coyne, misinformation, Moon, Olympics, religion, Richard Dawkins, science, Scientific American, sex binary, Sports, testosterone, The Last Supper, wokeness, women Dawkins and Other Evolutionary Biologists May Be Learning a Hard Lesson Denyse O’Leary August 13, 2024 Bioethics, Evolution, Genetics, Scientific Freedom 8 Dawkins and others believe that Facebook’s ban hammer fell on his questions about Imane Khalif competing in the women’s division boxing at the 2024 Olympics. Read More ›
kinesin 2 Type post Date March 16, 2020 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, ATP synthase, California, Carnegie Mellon University, Cassini mission, Curiosity rover, Dean Kenyon, flagellum, John West, kinesin, Leonardo da Vinci, Living Waters, Michael Behe, Mount Everest, Museum of the Bible, NASA, National Geographic, Norway, Secrets of the Cell, seeds, The Last Supper, The Magician's Twin, World Magazine Designs in Miniature — Some Are the Most Wonderful of All Science & Culture March 16, 2020 Intelligent Design 10 The smaller a design, the harder it may be to detect. But miniature designs can inspire awe more than large ones. Read More ›