God, Evolution, and Science

Apparently Francis Collins has a new book coming out on how he balances his religious beliefs with his work as a scientist.

Well, that is all fine and dandy and I personally view science and religion as separately areas for the most part. However, if you look at some of Collins’ interviews you realize that in fact his science appears to be compromised by his strict (i.e., fundamentalist) interpretation of certain aspects of religious belief.

For example see his PBS interview. In this he says that “Moral Law” comes from some higher power and gives the following example:

“If I’m walking down the riverbank, and a man is drowning, even if I don’t know how to swim very well, I feel this urge that the right thing to do is to try to save that person. Evolution would tell me exactly the opposite: preserve your DNA. Who cares about the guy who’s drowning? He’s one of the weaker ones, let him go. It’s your DNA that needs to survive. And yet that’s not what’s written within me.”

What an absolute load of crap. What he is saying here is that since someone might do something that is not in their own direct self interest it cannot therefore have evolved. Apparently, Collins has either never taken an evolution course or did not pay attention in one if he did. Does he suggest that soldier ants are following some moral code to sacrifice themselves for the colony? What about skin cells? Or birds that warn of coming predators? Basically, Collins is using his position as the head of NHGRI to foment anti-evolutionary points of view. It is one thing to express an opinion that one has faith and that one follows ones faith rather than following science. But instead Collins repeatedly says things that are hostile to the field of evolutionary biology. He may not intend it, but that is the way it is. It is a shame too as NHGRI (the intitute he is the head of) has done some good things for the world. His blather about evolution however, is not one of them.

This is not to say the evolution and religion are not compatible, but the way to make them compatible is NOT to mislead people about what the science of evolutionary biology reveals. It’s funny in a way – Collins claims he believes in “theistic evolution” or the idea that God created the natural laws, including those of evolutionary biology, and that those laws are how the hand of God works. But then I do not understand why it is OK to ignore those laws when convenient.

Glassy winged sharpshooter symbionts

ResearchBlogging.org

For those interested in wine production, or symbioses, you maybe interested in a paper we published a few days ago. It was on a study we did of bacterial symbionts of an insect known as the glassy winged sharpshooter. This insect is a vector for Pierce’s Disease in grapes – a nasty disease that if it is found in a vineyard might lead to the vineyard being sacrificed for the greater good.

Anyway – we did a study of bacteria that live inside the insect that make nutrients for their insect host and without whcih the insect will die. An understanding of these symbionts will hopefully lead to better methods to control the spread of this invasive insect.

Our paper can be found in PLoS Biology here.
A synopsis of our article is here.
An article in Science Now about our study is here
An article in the Central Valley Business Times is here.
Nature highlighted it in their “Research highlights” section
And ASM article about this here
Link to our collaborator’s lab (Nancy Moran)

Some new links about our paper

For more information about the sharpshooter and Pierce’s Disease seee the following links

  • Pierce’s Disease Control Program for State of California: here
  • Glassy winged sharpshooter media information here
  • Introduction to Pierce’s Disease here

Wu, D., Daugherty, S., Van Aken, S., Pai, G., Watkins, K., Khouri, H., Tallon, L., Zaborsky, J., Dunbar, H., Tran, P., Moran, N., & Eisen, J. (2006). Metabolic Complementarity and Genomics of the Dual Bacterial Symbiosis of Sharpshooters PLoS Biology, 4 (6) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040188

Moving to Davis

Well, it has been a while. Things got a little out of hand in life. I am now a Professor at U. C. Davis, in their new Genome Center.

Prior to Davis, I was at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR), an incredible place that pioneered genome squencing and analysis. I was a faculty there from 1998-2006 and felt like a kid in a candy shop pretty much the whole time there.

In the beginning

Well, this is it. My first blog. Welcome.