| Commandeering Evolution |
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| Written by T. M. Moore | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Saturday, 03 May 2008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and reptiles. Romans 1.22, 23
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Subscribe To This Message The cataloging of the human genome has occasioned some heady speculations on the part of secular scientists, but none so ambitious or startling as that urged by Adrian Woolfson. Writing in the Winter, 2008, issue of Daedelus, Dr. Woolfson recommends nothing less than wresting the control of life out of the hands of evolution and placing it squarely in the hands of men ("Synthetic life"). Dr. Woolfson is impatient with natural selection as the best way of improving life and leading to new forms of life. And now, with science's ability to analyze and manipulate the genetic code, there are but a few obstacles in the way of man's taking over the creation and control of life from the clumsy and imperfect mechanisms of evolution. Indeed, Dr. Woolfson writes, "The end of natural selection as the principal agent of speciation will be an unprecedented milestone of human existence." He describes mastering the ability to create life as "likely to be the greatest enterprise of the twenty-first century." He insists, "The moment we complete this project, life will become dissociated from the natural evolutionary processes that have shaped it from its inception. New artificial modes of creation will then supplement, perhaps even supplant, such conventional historical mechanisms."
Once we've solved the problem of omniscience, we will need to master omnipotence. This step has two challenges. First, we must create a computer and software smart enough to calculate all the possibilities of life. Woolfson continues, "Following the successful compilation of an extensive, and ideally complete DNA sequence database, we will need to establish a universal algorithmic machine capable of computing the structure and function of any organism from the abstract mathematical notation of its genomic structure." Bill Gates, suit up. Second, we need to figure out how to translate abstract mathematical calculations into flesh and blood: "The next issue to address is whether it is possible to translate the abstract logic of synthetic genomes into the molecular hardware of living creatures." Yes, well, that could take a while.
A conversation starter: Some scientists believe they should take over the management of life from the processes of evolution. Is this a good thing? Is this something we should be supporting? Add as favourites (9) | Quote this article on your site | Print | E-mail
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There
are only a few obstacles that need to be overcome. First, men will
have to become, if not omniscient, at least approaching it. Before
this project can commence, it will be necessary to identify every
single form of life on earth and map its gene sequence. Given the
fact that we still don't know how many species of living things are
yet to be discovered, or whether we'll ever be able to say for
certain that we have found them all - not to mention the time
involved decoding all those genetic structures - this could take a
while. Undaunted, Woolfson believes we should press on, taking care
to preserve every living species on the planet (and what if there is
life elsewhere in the cosmos?) and working hard to "trawl every
available niche of the microenvironment, so as to capture as many
examples of the different species on Earth as is practically
possible." Images of white-clad scientists creeping through dark
caves, crawling around on jungle floors, and driving around in
bathyspheres dance through my head.
Two
images kept colliding in my mind as I read this article over and
over. The first is that of a wild-eyed scientist like the guy in Back
to the Future,
prattling on about the glories and possibilities of time travel as he
paces back and forth in his white coat in what everyone knows is an
entertaining fiction and nothing more. The second image was of Steve
Martin, doing his famous "How to Be a Millionaire" shtick. That
bit begins, "First, get a million dollars." Secular scientists
must be getting bored. Or maybe they have too much time on their
hands. Having rejected God and His divine sovereignty as exercising
any constraints on their imaginations and projects, they now want to
throw evolution out of the driver's seat as well. Then science
would be in control of life! Imagine the possibilities! Imagine the
breakthroughs for good! Imagine the uncountable Frankenstein
monsters, created for fun and profit, that would be unleashed on the
world. Imagine all this, then pity the poor scientist in his hubris
and foolhardiness. The mere idea that men might be able to acquire
the kind of comprehensive knowledge and power to be able to become
masters of all life reveals much about the self-image of the
scientific enterprise. The belief that we should actually seek to do
should give us all cause for alarm.




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