While our scientists struggle with ethics, the Islamic world forges ahead Stem cell researchers are branded by the Catholic church as playing God, but Iran’s geneticists are unhindered by doctrine In recent days I have been asked on three separate occasions whether I think physicists are going to destroy the world the moment they switch on the Large Hadron Collider – the huge underground particle accelerator in Geneva – later this year. They ask if, as has been reported, the energies it will produce when beams of near light-speed subatomic particles are smashed together will create mini black holes that will swallow up the whole planet. Add to this the more rational worries many people have about the global catastrophe of climate change if we don’t act fast enough to curb our reliance on fossil fuels, or about GM crops producing Frankenstein food, hybrid embryo research producing Frankenstein babies, and nuclear power leaving future generations a legacy of toxic radioactive waste, and one is left with the impression that the average person is pretty scared about the rate of current scientific advances. Of the above doom-laden list, the only issue I am unable to provide any sort […]
Monday, August 11th, 2008
While Our Scientists Struggle with Ethics, the Islamic World Forges Ahead
Author: JIM AL-KHALILI, PHD
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Thursday July 31 2008
Link: While Our Scientists Struggle with Ethics, the Islamic World Forges Ahead
Source: The Guardian (U.K.)
Publication Date: Thursday July 31 2008
Link: While Our Scientists Struggle with Ethics, the Islamic World Forges Ahead
Stephan: When the Bush Administration caved to the Religious Right and crippled American genetic research the rest of the world, even in Iran, just kept moving on, as this report makes clear. The implications of our increasing backwardness are not happy.
Dr. Jim Al-Khalili is a professor of physics at the University of Surrey, in the U.K.