Science Moves Forward: Evolution and the Origin of Life
The animal cell. Science Daily reports on a new approach to the possible genesis and evolution of Eukaryotic cells, a key piece to the puzzle of the origins of life Continue Reading →
The animal cell. Science Daily reports on a new approach to the possible genesis and evolution of Eukaryotic cells, a key piece to the puzzle of the origins of life Continue Reading →
Bond Falls, Upper Peninsula Michigan, USA. I did a short blog just at the start of the Fall season here in the Midwest and featured some stock photos of areas Continue Reading →
Why I Write. I’ve written before on the looks and comments I get on my bumper stickers. Most are quite positive, like the one above. I even had a guy Continue Reading →
Trapped in Religious Bullshit? Check out this reddit post: “My Parent’s Pastors Who are Jehovah’s Witnesses, Told me I’d get Aids and become a Homosexual if I Keep Smoking Weed Continue Reading →
Stephen Prothero. Dr. Prothero is a professor of the Department of Religion at Boston University and a regular contributor to the USA Today. His recent opinion column: Islam isn’t about Continue Reading →
Well, no research, no rebuttal, no rant, no rave, no analysis, no reason. Just “Thanks.” This “Dispatches from the New Enlightenment” was just an exciting, maybe kinda sorta idea, “will Continue Reading →
Nonie Darwish. An excerpt from her blog. If you wonder why it seems moderates are too quiet in the Islamic world, there are plenty of them, but like Xianity in Continue Reading →
Pope Francis. Media darling, progressive, rights crusader, reformer, all around good guy or a complacent figurehead and an accessory to more suffering and death of children worldwide than all the Continue Reading →
There’s a lot of ugly stuff going on in the world with IS (Islamic State) and Ebola dominating the headlines. I thought I’d write a bit on something real: Consciousness. Continue Reading →
William James… didn’t look like a firebrand, a revolutionary. James, one of the early pioneers of American psychology whose heyday was the late 1800’s didn’t appear to be much of Continue Reading →