3d-rendering-of-a-dark-cell-at-night-stockpack-adobe-stock-347292952-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date March 21, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsPsychologySociology Tagged , anxiety, Augustine Brannigan, college students, crying, emotional depression, experimental design, Office of Naval Research, penologists, persistent scientific errors, Philip G. Zimbardo, prison breaks, prisoner abuse, prisoners, psychologists, public policy, rage, Retraction Crisis, Retraction Watch, San Quentin State Prison, self-correcting, social psychology, Stanford Prison Experiment, Stanford University, study design, Thibault Le Texier, University of Calgary Retract the Stanford Prison Experiment? Denyse O’Leary March 21, 2025 Bioethics, Psychology, Sociology 7 Beware of wildly popular sociology that tells us that our public policy preferences are somehow embedded in human nature. Life was never as simple as that. Read More ›
Hitler-1536x806 Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date February 1, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , Adolf Hitler, California State University, Center for Science and Culture, Darwin Day in America, Darwinian racism, Darwinism, Discovery Institute Press, Ernst Haeckel, euthanasia, evolution, genocide, Germans, history, Holocaust, Houston Baptist University, Nancy Pearcey, Nazis, Nordic race, Racism, Richard Weikart, The Descent of Man, Third Reich, University of Calgary, white nationalism, World War II New Book Explores Darwinian Racism, Then and Now Jonathan Witt February 1, 2022 Bioethics, Evolution 3 To hear some tell it, Adolf Hitler was a Christian creationist who rejected Darwinian evolution. Read More ›
asteroid Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date December 12, 2021 CategoriesBioethicsPhysical Sciences Tagged , asteroid, Christianity, eugenics, euthanasia, extinction, human extinction, Humanize, Joni Eareckson Tada, Oxford University, Social Darwinism, suffering, transhumanism, University of Calgary Bioethicists Okay Human Extinction to Eliminate Suffering Wesley J. Smith December 12, 2021 Bioethics, Physical Sciences 5 A few months ago, Oxford professor Roger Crisp opined that we might not want to stop a huge asteroid from hitting the Earth. Read More ›
Piltdown Man Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date November 9, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionHuman Origins and Anthropology Tagged , Archaeoraptor, Ernst Haeckel, fossils, fraud, human evolution, Icons of Evolution, Jonathan Wells, National Geographic, Piltdown Man, University of Calgary As Science Frauds Go, Haeckel Beats Piltdown Man David Klinghoffer November 9, 2020 Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology 3 Piltdown Man is a historical curiosity. Haeckel continues to resound in our minds today. Read More ›