Lucretia_committing_suicide Type post Author Richard Weikart Date August 19, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Aristotle, Australia, Christianity, disabilities, happiness, Hebrews, Hippocratic Oath, human life, infanticide, Jews, Judeo-Christian tradition, Melbourne, physicians, Plato, Plutarch, poison, Pythagoras, Socrates, Stoics, The Republic Life Devalued: Suicide and Infanticide in Classical Antiquity Richard Weikart August 19, 2024 Bioethics, Medicine 13 Nick Vujicic’s story would probably have turned out quite differently if he had been born in ancient Greece or Rome. Read More ›
Socrates Louvre Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date June 26, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, Allan Bloom, Antony Flew, atheism, Censor of the Year, Center for Science and Culture, Charles Darwin, comedy, Cosmos (series), Darwin's bulldog, Darwinian evolution, Discovery Institute Press, evidence, intelligent design, Jerry Coyne, Marcos Eberlin, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Plato, poets, Socrates, The Autobiography of Charles Darwin, The Republic, The Unofficial Guide to Cosmos, There Is a God, Thomas Henry Huxley, tragedy, wind Origins of a Dictum David Klinghoffer June 26, 2019 Intelligent Design 4 “Follow the evidence wherever it leads.” It's almost the official rallying cry of intelligent design proponents. Read More ›