Here Today... Gone To Hell! | Message Board


Guns N Roses
of all the message boards on the internet, this is one...

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
November 05, 2024, 01:49:52 AM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
1228669 Posts in 43279 Topics by 9264 Members
Latest Member: EllaGNR
* Home Help Calendar Go to HTGTH Login Register
+  Here Today... Gone To Hell!
|-+  Off Topic
| |-+  The Jungle
| | |-+  Scientists Find Gene for Sociability - was this really published?
0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: [1] Go Down Print
Author Topic: Scientists Find Gene for Sociability - was this really published?  (Read 2548 times)
leatherebel
VIP
****

Karma: 0
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 873

Facts are the enemy of truth.


« on: June 11, 2008, 10:06:15 PM »

Found this in a "fiction" book with supposedly a big element of truth.
Does anyone know if this was really published in Business Online or the NY Times?



From Business Online:

Scientists Find Gene for Sociability
Is the tendency for sociability inherited? Scientists at the Morecomb Laboratories, at Columbia University, believe that it is. They report they have found the gene that regulates it, and they have applied for a patent on that gene...


Op-Ed Commentary from the New York Times:

A "Sociability Gene"? When Will the Nonsense Stop?
Columbia University researchers now claim to have found a sociability gene. What's next? The shyness gene? The reclusive gene? The monastic gene? The get-off-my-back gene?
In truth, the researchers are taking advantage, of the public's lack of knowledge of how genes actually operate. No single gene controls any behavioral trait. Unfortunately, the public doesn't know that. There think there's a gene for eye color, for height, and for hair curliness, so why not one for sociability? Geneticists will not speak out. They all sit on the boards of private companies, and are in a race to identify genes they can patent for their own profit.
Will this ever stop? Evidently not.
Logged

"Asking Axl Rose what he thinks about critics is like asking a lamp post how it feels about dogs."
Pages: [1] Go Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.9 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.032 seconds with 18 queries.