'God gene' discovered by scientist behind gay DNA theory
By Elizabeth Day
(Filed: 14/11/2004)
Religious belief is determined by a person's genetic make-up according to a
study by a leading scientist.
After comparing more than 2,000 DNA samples, an American molecular
geneticist has concluded that a person's capacity to believe in God is
linked to brain chemicals.
His findings were criticised last night by leading clerics, who challenge
the existence of a "god gene" and say that the research undermines a
fundamental tenet of faith - that spiritual enlightenment is achieved
through divine transformation rather than the brain's electrical impulses
Dr Dean Hamer, the director of the Gene Structure and Regulation Unit at the
National Cancer Institute in America, asked volunteers 226 questions in
order to determine how spiritually connected they felt to the universe. The
higher their score, the greater a person's ability to believe in a greater
spiritual force and, Dr Hamer found, the more likely they were to share the
gene, VMAT2.
Studies on twins showed that those with this gene, a vesicular monoamine
transporter that regulates the flow of mood-altering chemicals in the brain,
were more likely to develop a spiritual belief.
Growing up in a religious environment was said to have little effect on
belief. Dr Hamer, who in 1993 claimed to have identified a DNA sequence
linked to male homosexuality, said the existence of the "god gene" explained
why some people had more aptitude for spirituality than others.
"Buddha, Mohammed and Jesus all shared a series of mystical experiences or
alterations in consciousness and thus probably carried the gene," he said.
"This means that the tendency to be spiritual is part of genetic make-up.
This is not a thing that is strictly handed down from parents to children.
It could skip a generation - it's like intelligence."
His findings, published in a book, The God Gene: How Faith Is Hard-Wired
Into Our Genes, were greeted sceptically by many in the religious
establishment.
The Rev Dr John Polkinghorne, a fellow of the Royal Society and a Canon
Theologian at Liverpool Cathedral, said: "The idea of a god gene goes
against all my personal theological convictions. You can't cut faith down to
the lowest common denominator of genetic survival. It shows the poverty of
reductionist thinking."
The Rev Dr Walter Houston, the chaplain of Mansfield College, Oxford, and a
fellow in theology, said: "Religious belief is not just related to a
person's constitution; it's related to society, tradition, character -
everything's involved. Having a gene that could do all that seems pretty
unlikely to me."
Dr Hamer insisted, however, that his research was not antithetical to a
belief in God. He pointed out: "Religious believers can point to the
existence of god genes as one more sign of the creator's ingenuity - a
clever way to help humans acknowledge and embrace a divine presence."
13 October 2004: Homosexual link to fertility genes
================================
BBC NEWS | Health | Non-sex genes 'link to gay trait'
There is no one 'gay' gene. Lead researcher Dr Brian Mustanski. They found
several identical stretches of DNA that were shared among gay siblings on
...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4215427.stm
Is There a 'Gay Gene'?
A heated debate over the existence of a "gay gene" emerged from a 1993 ...
That study linked DNA markers on the X chromosome to male sexual
orientation. ...
HTTP://www.webmd.com/content/article/100/105486.htm
DNA - genes and things
Gene intoduces you to his Gene pals and the rest of the characters found on
the chromosome.
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