Australian Bioscience News & Views

Biosciences related musings from an Aussie jill of all trades.

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Church and State

I'm usually exceptionally positive about Sydney University, being a place where opportunity abounds, for those lucky enough to gain a place as a student or employee. It as a community that does huge amounts of charitable and voluntary work on the side, and through its professional endeavours adds much to our country's abilities in ethics, finance, science of life and matter, medicine, history, the social and anthroplogical sciences, psychology, and many worthy fields. Today though, I am saddened to report that my alma mater has fallen onto the wrong side of the divide on separation of Church and State.

In order to secure an empty piece of land curently owned by St John's College, for the purposes of creating a wonderful new facility for medical research, the leaders of the university have agreed to accept the land with the condition that no research about euthanasia, stem cells, or the use of foetal tissue be conducted in that facility. Of course, such research will still be conducted elsewhere within the university, for the benefit of all, Catholic or other, but the acceptance of such a condition is a problem none the less. Our tax dollars, and the profits of private companies are devoted to universities and their much needed basic research. This research is too expensive to do elsewhere at present, as the masses of keen scientists, administrators, technicians, and ethicists are hard to gather in other place, without huge economic impost. Yet, it is possible for a single religion to rule on what is an acceptable field of enquiry, thus side stepping the many questions our community has about the ethics of research.

I am even more demoralised by the news, because our federal government will not defend this co-mingling of Church beliefs and State decisions on our research spending. Our current leaders do not believe in this essential separation of Church and State, not seeing the value it provides a civil society. Though I suspect I'm preaching only to the converted, I will say it now, this separation is vital to our survival as a society respectful of individual difference. Among our number are of course many Catholics, Anglicans, and other Christians, but there are also great numbers of Buddhists, Secular Humanists, Hindus, Athiests, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Agnositcs, Taoists, Zoroastrians, Wiccans, and other beliefs too numerous to name. Our diversity makes us strong, with the ability to see the world in many different ways, to approach the same dilemma in a thousand different ways, and accept our fellow beings as whole, and worthy members of a community ready to address the world's problems. Any reduction of this essential diversity, by allowing any one group to determine how our research money is spent, is a reduction of our excellent ability to live as a respectful community full of diversity and strength.

Shame on Sydney University for giving in, and shame on our government for encouraging it!

12 February 2007 in Cloning, Current Affairs, Medicine, Religion, Science | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

What makes you you?

There is much to be said for how much genetics contribute to essential characteristics. To see what a genetically diverse bunch we are, check out the Genographic Project. Height, eye and hair colour, sometimes weight, maybe temperament can be down to genetics. Susceptibility for everything from cancer to high blood pressure, with depression in some cases, can be attributed to genes. (recent articles)

Sex and maybe gender are determined by genes. If you don’t follow why I treat sex & gender as separate things, my thanks go to BC Holmes for providing a succinct synopsis of a small part of the complexities of human sex and gender variation.

It’s a tangled web though, as environment plays a big role. How much probably depends … I’ll think about exactly what it depends on and get back to you. Susceptibility to some types of cancers may be genetic, but environmental factors are just as often the culprits. Diet certainly impacts on weight, temperament, and at the extremes, even intelligence. Childhood environment influences adult height too. Many of us would count at least a couple of those factors in when describing ourselves J (recent articles)

Behaviour is a sticky subject. Religion and politics all have much to say on behaviour, and in my opinion often unwisely even more to say on the sciences of human behaviour. Still, controversy aside, a good approach to ethics can save a lot of bad science getting useless column inches.

Presence or absence of a soul – I’d better leave that to someone I find a great solace in times of office pain, in a very enlightened post on cloning J

Most of us recognise our friends’ faces, and consider that an essential aspect of who they are. While some of us can't put a name to a face to save our lives.

All in all, in my view it boils down to the fact that there are a multitude of factors that make up the essence of a person, and saying that any specific idea, behaviour or invention will bring on ‘the end of the world as we know it’ is just not sane!

07 December 2005 in Cloning, Current Affairs, International news, Religion, Science | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Recent Posts

  • Travel ain't what it was
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  • Church and State
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