Pantheratigrisaltaica13-BuffaloZoo Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date August 13, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEnvironment & ClimateEvolution Tagged , biodiversity, bioethicists, bioethics, climate change, flooding, health, health care, hospitals, hubris, human exceptionalism, humans, medical ethics, moral expertise, public health policy, war, wildfires Only Bioethicists Can Save the Planet! Wesley J. Smith August 13, 2025 Bioethics, Environment & Climate, Evolution 3 Apparently, anyone with any claim to victimization or marginalization can be a bioethicist now. Read More ›
right whale Type post Author Jonathan Witt Date June 3, 2024 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateIntelligent DesignScientific Freedom Tagged , California, Cambridge University Press, conservation, design filter, endangered species, Kenneth Miller, Michael Shellenberger, nature, Nature (journal), Patrick Brown, politically incorrect, scientific materialism, self-censorship, specification, The Design Inference, wildfires, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert “Move Along, Nothing to See Here”: What Happens When You Challenge a Dominant Narrative Jonathan Witt June 3, 2024 Environment & Climate, Intelligent Design, Scientific Freedom 9 William Dembski no longer has to be coy about the challenge his design filter poses for modern evolutionary theory. Read More ›
E. coli bacteria Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date January 28, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , archaea, bacteria, California, careers, coronavirus, death camps, eukaryotes, evolution of the sexes, genders, John Zmirak, Maine, nucleus, parody, prokaryotes, sex, sex and gender, sexuality, The Stream, UC Riverside, wildfires The Tragedy of Eukaryote Evolution David Klinghoffer January 28, 2021 Evolution 3 Think of all the frustrated longings, misunderstandings, jealousy, and more entailed by the fact that males and females constitute separate genders. Read More ›
Molecules Don’t Care About Life Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 10, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionOrigin of Life Tagged , abiogenesis, California, hype, intelligent design, James Tour, misinformation, nonlife, Oregon, Rice University, science media, scientists, Seattle, smoke, synthetic organic chemistry, wildfires James Tour: “Molecules Don’t Care About Life” David Klinghoffer September 10, 2020 Evolution, Origin of Life 3 Blowing smoke is what science media and even scientists themselves do a great deal of the time when they talk about the origin of life. Read More ›
Cosmos Anthropocene Type post Date April 20, 2020 CategoriesPhysical SciencesPhysics Tagged , __k-review, aerosols, climate change, clouds, coronavirus, Cosmos 3.0, Cosmos: Possible Worlds, droughts, flooding, Forbes, geography, global warming, Jay Richards, Neil deGrasse Tyson, predictions, wildfires Tyson and Cosmos Sound the Climate Alarm Again Science and Culture April 20, 2020 Physical Sciences, Physics 5 During the present coronavirus threat we can learn some valuable lessons about model predictions. Read More ›