by Denyse O'Leary
ARN correspondent
Watson is currently suspended from chancelor duties.
Watson's own institute has itself been linked to historical Darwinian racism, even though it dutifully denounced him.
Also, here's a spoof interview from The Brites on the reaction of a paragon of political correctness, trying to hold together Darwinism and egalitarianism. (Of COURSE it doesn't work. As I point out here, you can't have both Darwinism and egalitarianism. The only possible result is PC idiocy.)
More seriously, a friend offers some brief extracts from Watson's book DNA:
"Our discovery had put an end to a debate as old as the human species: Does life have some magical, mystical essence, or is it, like any chemical reaction carried out in a science class, the product of normal physical and chemical processes? Is there something divine at the heart of a cell that brings it to life? The double helix answered that question with a definitive No" (xii).
No?
"Only with the discovery of the double helix and the ensuing genetic revolution have we had grounds for thinking that the powers held traditionally to be the exclusive property of the gods might one day be ours. Life, we now know, is nothing but a vast array of coordinated chemical reactions. The 'secret' to that coordination is the breathtakingly complex set of instructions inscribed, again chemically, in our DNA" (396).
One of the most innovative scientists I know has strictly cautioned me against any kind of "nothing buttery" as observed above.
Watson is nonetheless generous, after his fashion:
I do not dispute the right of individuals to look to religion for a private moral compass, but I do object to the assumption of too many religious people that atheists live in a moral vacuum. Those of us who feel no need for a moral code written down in an ancient tome have, in my opinion, recourse to an innate moral intuition long ago shaped by natural selection promoting social cohesion in groups of our ancestors.
But, unbelievers that we are, Montreal neuroscientist Mario Beauregard and I doubt that any such "innate moral intuition" can be created by the magic of natural selection. The moral intuition of relatedness come rather from the relationship between our limited minds and the mind that created the universe in which we live
Oh, well, it is obvious that Watson is not a corner stool at our local coffee klatsch. He doesn't even like Gattaca, whose limitations I concede myself - but he dislikes it for entirely different* reasons:
In addition to laying out a misleadingly dismal vision of our future within the film itself, the creators of Gattaca concocted a promotional tag line aimed at the deepest prejudices against genetic knowledge: "There is no gene for the human spirit." It remains a dangerous blind spot in our society that so many wish this were so. If the truth revealed by DNA could be accepted without fear, we should not despair for those who follow us. [p 405]
Well, it's just true. There is NO gene for the human spirit. That doesn't mean that science could never discover anything about the human spirit. It means that looking for a God gene (God spot, God module) that creates it is a waste of time.
*I didn't believe that a guy could fake out the fitness tests with a diseased heart. Didn't sound right.
Also:
The US government did NOT falsify accepted age of Grand Canyon
Neanderthal guy was one of us (but still won't use underarm deodorant)
Key atheist argument a shell game?
Another novelist overcomes stroke, produces new book
Toronto-based Canadian journalist Denyse O'Leary (www.designorchance.com) is the author of the multiple award-winning By Design or by Chance? (Augsburg Fortress 2004), an overview of the intelligent design controversy. She was named CBA Canada's Recommended Author of the Year in 2005 and is co-author, with Montreal neuroscientist Mario Beauregard, of the just-published The Spiritual Brain: A neuroscientist's case for the existence of the soul (Harper 2007).
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