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According to Modern Science...
12 February 2005
"Modern science," reports Nicholas Kristof (be ware of any claim that begins with "modern science") "is turning up a possible reason why the religious right is flourishing and secular liberals aren't: instinct. It turns out that our DNA may predispose humans toward religious faith." There's more, but we recommend instead this response from Adam H. Becker, an occasional Revealer contributor and assistant professor of religious studies here at NYU: "One should perhaps be wary of Dean Hamer's arguments about the 'God
Gene.' They are reductionist and fail to take into account religion as
an essentially social phenomenon. They define religion as a private,
subjective experience, which then only plays itself out in the social
sphere. It is not a coincidence that Hamer's privileging of the
experiential corresponds to certain notions of religion that have been
put forward since Friedrich Schleiermacher's Speeches on Religion of
1798. This internalization of the locus of religiosity was in part a
direct response to the rise of science and the subsequent so-called
disenchantment that occurred. Considering that many scholars of religion
nowadays refuse even to define religion but rather see it as a term that
is part of the intellectual and social history of the West with a very
particular genealogy, I think Hamer's 'science' threatens to limit our
perspective on an extremely complex phenomenon. Furthermore, he is also
the author of Science of Desire: The Gay Gene and the Biology of
Behavior (1995), another book with problematic assumptions about human
nature -- especially since our notions of homosexuality and
heterosexuality seem to be modern concepts developed from the late 19th
century onwards. Hamer's work tends to naturalize the culturally
specific and thus reduces all human beings to a Western model."
More Becker on Revealer: "Apologetic Islam"; "Imam Ali in Sadr City"; "Dawn of the Dead."
More Revealer on Kristof: "The God Gulf at The NYT"; "Ultimate Concerns"; "Kristof-Watch"; "A Matter of Misinterpretation."

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