split Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date August 8, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Adam Jacobs, Alice Cronin, brain, Christof Koch, consciousness, corpus callosum, epilepsy, Feed Your Head, Justine Sergent, Michael Egnor, Michael Shermer, mind, MIT, neuroscience, split-brain surgery, The Immortal Mind, University of Amsterdam, violin, Wilder Penfield, Yair Pinto Conundrum: Split Brain But Unified Perception Denyse O’Leary August 8, 2025 Anatomy, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 8 Current research suggests that a non-materialist approach to the neuroscience of the human mind is quite viable. Read More ›
Fireworks over Seattle Type post Date January 1, 2021 CategoriesScientific Freedom Tagged , Andrew Moore, BioEssays, CDC, censorship, COVID-19, Dave Speijer, democracy, Dennis Prager, Discovery Institute, Evolution News, Facebook, Federal Government, free speech, intelligent design, Internet, Iran, Italy, Karl Popper, Paul Nelson, regulation, schools, search engines, social media, South Korea, Thomas Paine, University of Amsterdam, vaccine, White House Happy New Year! #1 Story of 2020: Biology Journal Demands Government Censorship of ID Science and Culture January 1, 2021 Scientific Freedom 7 What if major technology companies shy from censorship? Then the government should take aggressive action: “Make them.” Read More ›
Thomas_Paine_death_mask Type post Author Casey Luskin Date May 14, 2020 CategoriesScientific Freedom Tagged , Andrew Moore, BioEssays, CDC, censorship, COVID-19, Dave Speijer, democracy, Dennis Prager, Discovery Institute, Evolution News, Facebook, Federal Government, free speech, intelligent design, Iran, Italy, Karl Popper, Paul Nelson, schools, search engines, social media, South Korea, Thomas Paine, University of Amsterdam, vaccine, White House Prominent Biology Journal Demands Government Censorship of Intelligent Design Casey Luskin May 14, 2020 Scientific Freedom 7 A scientist calls for censorship while having the chutzpah to quote from Thomas Paine, a foremost spokesman for free speech in Western democracy. Read More ›
Jupiter Type post Date December 11, 2019 CategoriesMathematicsPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , __edited, Albert Einstein, Big Bang, black holes, metric tensor, Natalie Wolchover, Nobel Prize, Paul Dirac, Quanta Magazine, quantum mechanics, Shakespearean sonnet, Steven Weinberg, University of Amsterdam Are the Laws of the Universe “Inevitable”? Science and Culture December 11, 2019 Mathematics, Physical Sciences, Physics 3 What is inevitable here is not the mathematical beauty of physical law, but the circumlocutions scientists use to evade design in nature. Read More ›