logo

Search results for news involving science

2votes
  • Vote


  • Home | Science in Society | Life | News | Back to article Religion alters visual perception 17:50 14 November 2008 by Ewen Callaway For similar stories, visit the The Human Brain Topic Guide People of different religions have different perspectives on life, but do they also have different visual …

    3votes
  • Vote


  • ‘ segments done over the last couple of years by Discovery Channel’s daily science news show, Daily Planet. The show’s host, Jay Ingram, well-known and beloved science popularizer, was on board to be the book’s author. Eventually the project concept evolved into a book involving the complex re …

    9votes
  • Vote


  • … and Freethinkers held a news conference in Washington to present an open letter to President-elect Barack Obama. Citing a report that found 21 percent of those in the armed forces identifying themselves as atheists or having “no religion,” the groups called on the new administration to pursue …

    11votes
  • Vote


  • … a problem for the company — a very modern problem. For better or worse, this kind of social-media ‘flash flood’ of negative PR involving Twitter, blogs and Facebook is becoming more and more commonplace. It will be interesting to see how Motrin responds.” Just days before this storm hit, Seamus McAuley …

    12votes
  • Vote


  • A chaplain holds services for soldiers in an operating base in Ramadi, Iraq. (army.mil) So there are atheists in foxholes after all. Last week, on the eve of Veterans Day, the Secular Coalition for America and the Military Assn. of Atheists and Freethinkers held a news conference in Washington …

    15votes
  • Vote


  • … the imperative that we must at all times stand ready to chain the canards!”[7] To paraphrase: the SAIRR refuses to publish positive news about government. Instead it invents ‘statistics’ to drive its (political) agenda to discredit and oppose the ANC government. Thus, it is against the ANC …

    16votes
  • Vote


  • … administrators said they would have approved the request, but state law doesn’t allow it. At trial, the state’s defense of the adoption law rested on the shoulders of two scholars — George A. Rekers, a retired professor from the University of South Carolina, who taught neuropsychiatry and behavioral science …

    16votes
  • Vote


  • … administrators said they would have approved the request, but state law doesn’t allow it. At trial, the state’s defense of the adoption law rested on the shoulders of two scholars — George A. Rekers, a retired professor from the University of South Carolina, who taught neuropsychiatry and behavioral science …

    16votes
  • Vote


  • … administrators said they would have approved the request, but state law doesn’t allow it. At trial, the state’s defense of the adoption law rested on the shoulders of two scholars — George A. Rekers, a retired professor from the University of South Carolina, who taught neuropsychiatry and behavioral science …

    16votes
  • Vote


  • … administrators said they would have approved the request, but state law doesn’t allow it. At trial, the state’s defense of the adoption law rested on the shoulders of two scholars — George A. Rekers, a retired professor from the University of South Carolina, who taught neuropsychiatry and behavioral science …