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Meta
Category Archives: Science & Faith
Lunatic, Asylum, etc.
Just when you think that David Cameron’s stumblebum government cannot get any worse, here’s a piece of news that does not bode well for British patients, taxpayers or both. Tom Chivers writes in The Daily Telegraph: The man [just] put … Continue reading
Posted in Science & Faith
Tagged Homeopathy, Jeremy Hunt, Orrin Hatch, Public spending, superstition, UK
2 Comments
The Science of Akin
From the Guardian, one possible theory for the source of Akin’s idiot ‘science’: The idea that rape victims cannot get pregnant has long roots. The legal position that pregnancy disproved a claim of rape appears to have been instituted in … Continue reading
Posted in politics, Science & Faith
Tagged 2012 Elections, abortion, Religious Right, Todd Akin
5 Comments
Yes, It’s A Good Thing
That it is still possible to debate the advantages of extensive family planning efforts in the developing world (and, for that matter, here) never fails to astound. The Economist reports here on a paper that only reinforces the case: [W]hen … Continue reading
“Sawdust on the Floor”
From the memoirs of Mark Edward, a prominent former psychic: I’m quite confident that I would know by now if I had a spirit guide or my Aunt Ethel’s watchful ghost alongside me. I have looked and searched, then looked … Continue reading
Abdus Salam
Cross-posted on the Corner: Writing in the Spectator, Shiraz Maher suggests (correctly, surely) that most people are unlikely to have heard about Pakistan’s contribution to the discovery of the Higgs Boson, and explains why that is just fine with Pakistan: … Continue reading
A Natural Phenomenon
I’ve no particular enthusiasm for the ‘New Atheists’ (they are far too religious for my tastes), but, in its combination of incoherence and hysteria, this attack on them by Bryan Appleyard (H/T Andrew Sullivan) takes some beating. Here’s an extract … Continue reading
The “Bioethics” Fraud
Instapundit: “It’s always in bioethicists’ professional interest to suggest that a new technology raises troubling moral issues that require deep (funded) thought and extensive (lucrative) conferences.” Indeed.
Against Self-Government
The Council of Europe is, in theory, meant to be some sort of bulwark for the citizens of its member countries against the power of the overreaching state. That’s the theory. But here’s how it really works. The Daily Mail … Continue reading
Posted in politics, Religion, science, Science & Faith
Tagged assisted suicide, Council of Europe, Edward Leigh, Euthanasia
1 Comment
A Test of Civilization
Count me skeptical whether there is a ‘right’ to die, or a right to very much else for that matter, but a truly humane society would not force this helpless man to go to the courts for the relief he … Continue reading
Posted in culture, Religion, science, Science & Faith
Tagged Euthanasia, Tony Nicklinson, UK
4 Comments