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Are Scientists Playing God? It Depends on Your Religion

by JOHN TIERNEY
Published: November 20, 2007
Now that biologists in Oregon have reported using cloning to produce a
monkey embryo and extract stem cells, it looks more plausible than before
that a human embryo will be cloned and that, some day, a cloned human will
be born. But not necessarily on this side of the Pacific.
American and European researchers have made most of the progress so far in
biotechnology. Yet they still face one very large obstacle - God, as defined
by some Western religions.
While critics on the right and the left fret about the morality of stem-cell
research and genetic engineering, prominent Western scientists have been
going to Asia, like the geneticists Nancy Jenkins and Neal Copeland, who
left the National Cancer Institute and moved last year to Singapore.
Asia offers researchers new labs, fewer restrictions and a different view of
divinity and the afterlife. In South Korea, when Hwang Woo Suk reported
creating human embryonic stem cells through cloning, he did not apologize
for offending religious taboos. He justified cloning by citing his Buddhist
belief in recycling life through reincarnation.
When Dr. Hwang's claim was exposed as a fraud, his research was supported by
the head of South Korea's largest Buddhist order, the Rev. Ji Kwan. The monk
said research with embryos was in accord with Buddha's precepts and urged
Korean scientists not to be guided by Western ethics.
"Asian religions worry less than Western religions that biotechnology is
about 'playing God,'" says Cynthia Fox, the author of "Cell of Cells," a
book about the global race among stem-cell researchers. "Therapeutic cloning
in particular jibes well with the Buddhist and Hindu ideas of
 reincarnation."
You can see this East-West divide in maps drawn up by Lee M. Silver, a
molecular biologist at Princeton. Dr. Silver, who analyzes clashes of
spirituality and science in his book "Challenging Nature," has been charting
biotechnology policies around the world and trying to make spiritual sense
of who's afraid of what.
Most of southern and eastern Asia displays relatively little opposition to
either cloned embryonic stem-cell research or genetically modified crops.
China, India, Singapore and other countries have enacted laws supporting
embryo cloning for medical research (sometimes called therapeutic cloning,
as opposed to reproductive cloning intended to recreate an entire human
being). Genetically modified crops are grown in China, India and elsewhere.
In Europe, though, genetically modified crops are taboo. Cloning human
embryos for research has been legally supported in England and several other
countries, but it is banned in more than a dozen others, including France
and Germany.
In North and South America, genetically altered crops are widely used. But
embryo cloning for research has been banned in most countries, including
Brazil, Canada and Mexico. It has not been banned nationally in the United
States, but the research is ineligible for federal financing, and some
states have outlawed it.
Dr. Silver explains these patterns by dividing spiritual believers into
three broad categories. The first, traditional Christians, predominate in
the Western Hemisphere and some European countries. The second, which he
calls post-Christians, are concentrated in other European countries and
parts of North America, especially along the coasts. The third group are
followers of Eastern religions.
"Most people in Hindu and Buddhist countries," Dr. Silver says, "have a root
tradition in which there is no single creator God. Instead, there may be no
gods or many gods, and there is no master plan for the universe. Instead,
spirits are eternal and individual virtue - karma - determines what happens
to your spirit in your next life. With some exceptions, this view generally
allows the acceptance of both embryo research to support life and
genetically modified crops."
By contrast, in the Judeo-Christian tradition, God is the master creator who
gives out new souls to each individual human being and gives humans
"dominion" over soul-less plants and animals. To traditional Christians who
consider an embryo to be a human being with a soul, it is wrong for
scientists to use cloning to create human embryos or to destroy embryos in
the course of research.
But there is no such taboo against humans' applying cloning and genetic
engineering to "lower" animals and plants. As a result, Dr. Silver says,
cloned animals and genetically modified crops have not become a source of
major controversy for traditional Christians. Post-Christians are more
worried about the flora and fauna.
"Many Europeans, as well as leftists in America," Dr. Silver says, "have
rejected the traditional Christian God and replaced it with a post-Christian
goddess of Mother Nature and a modified Christian eschatology. It isn't a
coherent belief system. It might or might not incorporate New Age thinking.
But deep down, there's a view that humans shouldn't be tampering with the
natural world."

Hence the opposition to genetically modified food.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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