MagicFan
Student
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2001
- Messages
- 31
From the Wall Street Journal:
CHICAGO—Last September, Bruce Lahn, a professor of human genetics at the University of Chicago, stood before a packed lecture hall and reported the results of a new DNA analysis: He had found signs of recent evolution in the brains of some people, but not of others.
It was a triumphant moment for the young scientist. He was up for tenure and his research was being featured in back-to-back articles in the country’s most prestigious science journal. Yet today, Dr. Lahn says he is moving away from the research. “It’s getting too controversial,” he says.
Dr. Lahn had touched a raw nerve in science: race and intelligence.
What Dr. Lahn told his audience was that genetic changes over the past several thousand years might be linked to brain size and intelligence. He flashed maps that showed the changes had taken hold and spread widely in Europe, Asia and the Americas, but weren’t common in sub-Saharan Africa.”
{snip}
More recently, Dr. Lahn says he was moved when a student asked him whether some knowledge might not be worth having. It is a notion to which he has been warming.
Okay, I find this very scary. Isn't this the same thing the Church told Galileo, the father of modern astronomy, when he suggested that the earth revolved around the sun rather than the other way around?
Put yourself back in that time: this was a very scary thing back then. It implied that the Bible, the “moral guide from God for all mankind” might be wrong in some areas! If this moral guide were undermined, the Church thought, surely mankind would descend into barbarity and chaos.
Isn't this the same thing “the establishment” thinks today? That humans are inherently evil and racist and that even pursuing research like this will lead to all kinds of racist atrocities? And what does it say about science that there are certain areas that we should remain ignorant in?
Like I said, scary.
CHICAGO—Last September, Bruce Lahn, a professor of human genetics at the University of Chicago, stood before a packed lecture hall and reported the results of a new DNA analysis: He had found signs of recent evolution in the brains of some people, but not of others.
It was a triumphant moment for the young scientist. He was up for tenure and his research was being featured in back-to-back articles in the country’s most prestigious science journal. Yet today, Dr. Lahn says he is moving away from the research. “It’s getting too controversial,” he says.
Dr. Lahn had touched a raw nerve in science: race and intelligence.
What Dr. Lahn told his audience was that genetic changes over the past several thousand years might be linked to brain size and intelligence. He flashed maps that showed the changes had taken hold and spread widely in Europe, Asia and the Americas, but weren’t common in sub-Saharan Africa.”
{snip}
More recently, Dr. Lahn says he was moved when a student asked him whether some knowledge might not be worth having. It is a notion to which he has been warming.
Okay, I find this very scary. Isn't this the same thing the Church told Galileo, the father of modern astronomy, when he suggested that the earth revolved around the sun rather than the other way around?
Put yourself back in that time: this was a very scary thing back then. It implied that the Bible, the “moral guide from God for all mankind” might be wrong in some areas! If this moral guide were undermined, the Church thought, surely mankind would descend into barbarity and chaos.
Isn't this the same thing “the establishment” thinks today? That humans are inherently evil and racist and that even pursuing research like this will lead to all kinds of racist atrocities? And what does it say about science that there are certain areas that we should remain ignorant in?
Like I said, scary.
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