Part XXXIX Man(kind)—A Dog’s Best Friend

Every pet has a special place in the heart of its human companions.  Shadow, the first g helped me get through some difficult times during my longer than normal single life.  My future wife, Angie, decided early in our relationship that a guy who had a collie couldn’t be too bad a guy.  Like me, …

Part XXXVII: A Lingering World Problem; COVID-19

To my past readers, my apologizes for the long period of inactivity, a bevy of late summer and fall activities (mostly outdoor) including tons of yard work, ongoing garage cleaning and organizing, designing, building, and modifying a ramp for our failing dog who requires nearly constant attention, extensive dental work for some of us, and …

Part XXXVI: Gregor Mendel & Charles Darwin

Since Gregor Mendel and Charles Darwin were contemporaries and both contributed immensely to biology, the question naturally arises, were they acquainted with each other’s work? One source I read begins with the assertion “read no further if you want a definite answer to this question.” However, the author concludes that “the unsolved mystery, therefore, remains: …

Part XXXV: Science and Religion (conclusion)

Conflict between science and religion exists today in areas where moral values are at stake. Reproductive freedom for women, contra­ception, abortion, euthanasia,umbilical cord cell research, and genetic engineering are the result of science and technology which have progressed more rapidly than social and religious acceptance. This raises the question of whether theology can or should …

Part XXXIV: Science and Religion (continued)

In essay part XXXIII we learned some of the history of science and religion and differences between them. We learned that, among other things, religion predates science and that they differ in purpose in our lives. In the present essay Gould briefly discusses his two greatest Victorian heroes, Charles Darwin and Thomas Huxley and how …

Part XXXIII: Science and Religion

History & differences       Although modern science began in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (and some scholars would claim the late fifthteenth century), the precursors of science go back to ancient Greece and Rome. However, not until a new method of inquiry relying on empirical analysis based on careful observation and data collection which replaced …

Part XXXII: Viruses revisited with special emphasis on COVID19

Originally I intended for my next several essays to treat the historical controversial battle between science and religion but changed my mind to return to the subject of viruses for obvious reasons.  Let’s review some basic viral facts.  First of all, viruses are composed of just two kinds of organic molecules, an outer protein coat …

Part XXX Did Darwin read Mendel.

Did Darwin read Mendel?  David Galton Read no further if you want a definite answer to this question. It is a sort of detective story with clues scattered around. The circumstances surrounding the question however are so interesting since they involve two of the most important scientific publications of the 19th century. The truly ground-breaking …