FRONTIERS OF MEDICINE: Human Genome - Human Being
AN OPEN CONFERENCE of the SCIENTIFIC & MEDICAL NETWORK with the GLOBAL ACADEMY and THE ACADEMY FOR FUTURE SCIENCE, May 12th 2001,London
"Science can tell you what's possible, but it certainly can't tell you what's desirable," Ian G. Barbour, Physicist and Theologian
Spectacular advances in molecular genetics are forcing humankind to face the most challenging question in its history: are we simply an accident of biochemistry or self-determining spiritual entities? Fundmental questions as to who we are and who we want to become are assuming God-like proportions.
Does understanding our DNA bring us any closer to Socrates admonition to 'Know thyself?'. And are we wise enough to mould ourselves to the extent that new technology may allow?
This international conference brings together distinguished speakers from the four fields of biology, medical genetics, complementary medicine and theology/ethics. It will explore diverse models of the human being and ask if their integration might lead to an understanding that does justice to all levels of analysis and types of human experience. The conference will also consider the philosophical and ethical implications arising from these models.
"Man did not weave the web of life - he is merely a strand in it.
Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself." Chief Seattle
This extraordinary public conference is the outcome of a collaboration initiated at the State of the World Forum and Future Visions meetings (the latter sponsored by the John Templeton Foundation and the International Space Sciences Organisation) in New York in September 2000. At that meeting the Global Academy sponsored a number of dialogues on the spiritual, medical and social implications of the human genome project. All those attending are invited to join what can only be considered the most important issue to be debated in human history.
Imperial College, Exhibition Road, London SW7, Saturday 12th May 2001 Booking enquiries and conference timetable: Tel: 01333 340490 www.scimednet.org
For media enquiries, speaker interviews, etc. please contact Jayne Warren on: (0044) 0207 371 2999 E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
FACTFILE
1. In January 2001,the House of Lords voted to allow changes to the regulations governing research to allow so-called "therapeutic" cloning of human embryos. It was argued that research could help in the battle to conquer Parkinson's disease, cancers, strokes, heart disease and other serious conditions.
2. Passionate opposition to the move came from religious leaders worldwide - the Dalai Lama, the Pope, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Roman Catholic archbishops of Glasgow and Westminster, the Chief Rabbi and the President of the Muslim College - who argued that: "These complex questions deserve to be examined in far greater detail than a brief parliamentary debate on an unamendable order would permit. We would therefore strongly urge the referral of these matters to a select committee of your Lordships House where evidence may be weighed in a calm and sober manner."
3. Scientists predict that the first human trials, probably for a brain disease like Parkinson's, could take place in the next three years or so, with a potential clinical application in a five to seven-year period. 4. January 17th 2001, Arthur Caplan, Director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center stated: ‘The antidote to the blind application of genetic engineering is to start talking about what should and should not be allowed, who will pay and what standards ought to apply to those who want to promote and sell services that promise to make utopian children. The proper response is not legislation to stop the mad scientists but a public debate that will teach us how best to control ourselves’.
5. Lord Alton questioned the rightness of treating the human embryo as "just another accessory to be created, bartered, frozen or destroyed" adding: "Since 1990, when miracle cures were promised for 4,000 inherited diseases, between 300,000 and half a million human embryos have been destroyed or experimented upon. There have been no cures, but our willingness to walk this road has paved the way for more and more demand."
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES
Professor Brian Goodwin
Professor Brian Goodwin, PhD is Emeritus Professor of Biology at the Open University and currently directs the MSc in Holistic Science at Schumacher College. He is author of How the Leopard Changed its Spots, which proposes an alternative to Neo-Darwinism based on the concept of organisms as self-organising, transforming wholes. He is a Vice-President of the Scientific and Medical Network.
Dr. William Hurlbut
Dr. William Hurlbut, MD is a physician and lecturer in the Program in Human Biology at Stanford University, teaching courses in biomedical ethics, including one entitled Adam 2000: Images of Human Life in Biomedical Technology. He completed post-doctoral studies in theology and medical ethics and works with the Center for International Security and Cooperation on a project formulating policy on chemical and biological warfare and with NASA on projects in astrobiology.
Dr. James J. Hurtak
Dr. James J. Hurtak, PhD, is President of the Academy for Future Science. He is a social scientist and futurist with two doctorates who studied at the Universities of California and Minnesota. His main concern is the interface between science, religion and the environment. He was a presenter at the recent Parliament of World Religions (1999) in Cape Town.
Dr. Joe Jacobs
Dr. Joe Jacobs MD, MBA received his Medical degree from Yale University and his MBA from the Wharton School of Business. He served as Director of the Office of Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health. He has authored and/or contributed to eight books including, Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology; Medical Futility and the Evaluation of Life Sustaining Interventions and Community Oriented Primary Care: From Principles to Practice.
Dr. Kim Jobst
Dr. Kim Jobst, MD is a former consultant at Glasgow Homoeopathic Hospital and is Visiting Professor of Complementary Medicine at Oxford Brookes University. He is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.
Rev. John Maxwell Kerr
Rev. John Maxwell Kerr teaches chemistry, divinity and philosophy at Winchester College and lectures on the Oxford University Summer School about the implications of human genetics research. He is a former Lecturer in Chemical Engineering, University of Nottingham, Research Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and Warden of the Society for Ordained Scientists.
Dr. Robert Lanza
Dr. Robert Lanza MD is Vice President of Medical and Scientific development at Advance Cell Technology. He has over 200 publications, including Principles of Tissue Engineering, Yearbook of Cell and Tissue Transplantation, One World: the Health and Survival of the Human Species in the 21st century and Xeno: The Promise of Transplanting Animal Organs into Humans. He has worked closely with Jonas Salk (the Salk Institute), Gerald Edelman (Rockefeller University) and Richard Hynes (Center for Cancer Research at MIT). He has co-authored a series of papers with Christian Barnard MD and BF Skinner PhD.
Dr. Pauline Rudd
Dr. Pauline Rudd, PhD is a University Research Lecturer in the Glycobiology Institute of the University of Oxford, where she works in many different areas where glycoproteins play a significant role. She was recently on sabbatical at the Scripps Research Institute in California and is a Visiting Professor at Shanghai Medical University. She is also an Associate of the Community of St. Mary the Virgin, Oxfordshire and has participated in many science and religion meetings.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MEDICAL NETWORK
The Scientific and Medical Network is an informal international group consisting mainly of qualified scientists and doctors, together with psychologists, engineers, philosophers, therapists and many other professionals. The aim of the Network is to deepen understanding in science, medicine and education by fostering both rational analysis and intuitive insights. The Network was founded in 1973 and currently has more than 2,000
Members in over 50 countries. It questions the assumptions of contemporary scientific and medical thinking, so often limited by exclusively materialistic reasoning. Scientific and Medical Network, Lake House, Ockley, Nr. Dorking, Surrey RH5 5NS Tel: 01306 710072. Web: www.scimednet.org
THE GLOBAL ACADEMY
The Global Academy is dedicated to building open, sustained dialogue as a vehicle to create truly humane societies that are economically successful, environmentally sound, technologically and socially responsible. Established under the auspices and support of The Link Foundation by an international group of authors, scientists, business leaders, social forecasters and government leaders, the Academy convenes public forums throughout the Americas and Europe bringing together influential leaders from all sectors of society to dialogue about compelling issues of our time. The Link Foundation is incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation set up for exclusively charitable and educational purposes. www.thelinkfoundation.org
ACADEMY FOR FUTURE SCIENCE
The Academy for Future Science is an international non-profit organisation operating in more than 12 countries since its inception in 1973. Its charter covers the areas of archaeology, anthropology, environment and remote sensing, computers and physics, as well as studies in consciousness and comparative religion. Its work has been represented at the Parliament of the World's Religions (1999), The Millennium Peace Summit of World Religious Leaders (2000), and at many university conferences on the dialogue of science and religion. Its members have been responsible for the updating of medical curriculum at universities in South Africa and the monitoring of critical environmental areas in Brazil.