Irish Examiner on MSN
LGBT+ community 'remain deeply disappointed' by piecemeal handling of surrogacy law
It took 20 years to get surrogacy laws passed here, yet holes in the legislation means surrogate families remain in legal ...
Scientists have successfully created immature human egg-like cells from skin-derived stem cells, a significant step in ...
Presentations of the Fourth International Manifesto for an ecosocialist revolution - Break with capitalist growth at a public event organized by the RPM-M in the Philippines in September 2025 ...
Bivalve mollusks—clams, oysters, and mussels—come from one of the most ancient animal lineages on the planet. These shelled creatures are especially useful for aging research because many species show ...
The most dangerous animal in the world just got easier to study—and perhaps defeat one day. Researchers from Rockefeller ...
Some scientists are concerned that the Trump administration will use “junk science” when reviewing mifepristone’s safety ...
The freshwater flatworm Stenostomum brevipharyngium is, by all accounts, a simple fellow. The worm is small and entirely soft ...
Lawyers say artificial intelligence (AI) is the development that will most influence their law firms in the coming years, ...
As October comes to a close, edie and our innovation partner Springwise shine a spotlight on six of the month’s most exciting ...
It’s tempting to think that being pro-life would naturally mean supporting IVF, since so many people have used it as a way to have children. While the birth of any ...
A survey of reasoning behaviour in medical large language models uncovers emerging trends, highlights open challenges, and introduces theoretical frameworks that enhance reasoning behaviour ...
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