Planned-Parenthood Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date October 9, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, abortion pill, Albert Olszewski, Alberto Giubilini, Ana Rosa Rodriguez, Animal Liberation, aversive action, babies, birth canal, blood samples, brain, curette, developmental biology, dilatation and curettage, dilatation and evacuation, distress, fetal age, feticide, fetuses, Food and Drug Administration, gestational age, Guttmacher Institute, Indiana, injury, Montana, New York City, newborns, Nik Hoot, pain, Peter Singer, petri dish, phenylalanine, phenylketonuria, Planned Parenthood, pregnancy, prosthetic legs, Roman Catholic, Russia, Should the Baby Live?, Sopher clamp, tissue, United States, Washington Post At What Point In Its Development Can a Human Being Feel Pain? Jonathan Wells October 9, 2024 Bioethics, Medicine 13 Logic isn’t a sufficient answer to the question I raised, however. For a scientific answer, we need evidence. Read More ›
aaron-lee-WrPmNpKQUUY-unsplash Type post Author David Coppedge Date April 3, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignNeuroscience & MindPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , active transport, amino acid residues, cells, endoplasmic reticulum, hammer, Immune System, intelligent design, ion channels, lysosomes, macrophages, membranes, mitochondria, organelles, peroxisomes, physiology, Quartz, Science (journal), Science Advances, tissue, touch, Yale University Sense of Touch Is More Finely Tuned than We Thought David Coppedge April 3, 2024 Intelligent Design, Neuroscience & Mind, Physical Sciences, Physics 8 Like machines that deliver goods or open doors at the push of a button, mechanosensitive channels respond on contact. Read More ›
pregnant Type post Author Michael Egnor Date December 31, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyMedicine Tagged , abortion, asexual reproduction, budding, chromosome mosaicism, corals, egg, embryo, fetus, hermaphrodite, Homo fetus, Homo sapiens, human being, human development, human life, Jerry Coyne, mentation, microorganisms, morality, mother, murder, neonate, pain, person, pro-life, Roman Catholic, sperm, sponges, tissue, transient gestational hermaphroditism, womb, worms, zygote #2 Story of 2022: If a Fetus Isn’t a Human Being, What Is It? Michael Egnor December 31, 2022 Bioethics, Biology, Medicine 7 How is it that a leading professor of biology could fundamentally misunderstand the biology of human development? Read More ›
pregnant Type post Author Michael Egnor Date May 11, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyMedicine Tagged , __trending, abortion, asexual reproduction, budding, chromosome mosaicism, corals, egg, embryo, fetus, hermaphrodite, Homo fetus, Homo sapiens, human being, human development, human life, Jerry Coyne, mentation, microorganisms, morality, mother, murder, neonate, pain, person, pro-life, Roman Catholic, sperm, sponges, tissue, transient gestational hermaphroditism, womb, worms, zygote If a Fetus Isn’t a Human Being, What Is It? Michael Egnor May 11, 2022 Bioethics, Biology, Medicine 7 How is it that a leading professor of biology could fundamentally misunderstand the biology of human development? Read More ›
cancer Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date April 9, 2020 CategoriesBiologyMedicine Tagged , __k-review, cancer, cell metabolism, common descent, disease, DNA, evolutionary theory, medical degree, medical school, Mel Greaves, Moshe Oren, mutations, nature, Neo-Darwinism, p53 protein, patients, physicians, Randolph Nesse, Ras family, The Myth of Darwinian Medicine (series), Theodosius Dobzhansky, tissue, TP53 gene, tumor, tumor suppressor, Varda Rotter, Zombie Science (book) Evolutionary Theory Might Explain…a Deadly Disease Jonathan Wells April 9, 2020 Biology, Medicine 6 Psychiatrist Randolph Nesse, a leader in this movement for “Darwinian medicine,” would require “questions about evolution in medical licensing examinations.” Read More ›
tendons Type post Date March 26, 2018 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , __k-review, basketball, bone, brain, Canada, collagen, design constraint, eyes, Howard Glicksman, Irreducible Complexity, macroscale, molecular machines, Nanoscale, piano, running, Scientific Reports, tendons, tissue, walking Tendons Are Irreducibly Complex Science and Culture March 26, 2018 Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 A simple tissue we take for granted turns out to represent another example of irreducible complexity in the human body. Read More ›
4.0.4 Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date March 16, 2018 CategoriesBiologyEvolutionMedicine Tagged , __k-review, cancer, cell metabolism, common descent, Darwinian medicine, disease, DNA, evolutionary theory, medical degree, medical school, Mel Greaves, Moshe Oren, mutations, nature, Neo-Darwinism, p53 protein, patients, physicians, Randolph Nesse, Ras family, Theodosius Dobzhansky, tissue, TP53 gene, tumor, tumor suppressor, Varda Rotter, Zombie Science (book) Evolutionary Theory Might Explain…a Deadly Disease Jonathan Wells March 16, 2018 Biology, Evolution, Medicine 5 Evolutionary theory fails to explain what almost all biology students are told it explains: the origin and diversity of life. Read More ›