DEAN HAMER, Religion News Service
The Record (
12-02-2004
Molecular biologist finds
evidence of a 'God gene'
By DEAN HAMER, Religion News Service
Date: 12-02-2004, Thursday
Section: LOCAL
Edtion: All Editions.=.Two
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Since the dawn of our species,
spirituality has been deeply woven into the human
experience.
Why is spirituality such a
universal force? Why do people from all walks of life, regardless of their religious backgrounds, value spirituality as much as, or
more than, pleasure, power and wealth?
The answer is, at least in
part, hard-wired into our genes. Spirituality is one of our basic human
inheritances. It is, in short, an instinct - rooted in a "God gene"
folded deep in the intricate strands of our DNA.
Non-believers will argue that
finding a God gene proves there is no God - that
religion is nothing more than a genetic program for self-deception. Believers,
on the other hand, can point to the existence of God genes as one more sign of
the creator's ingenuity.
But these arguments mix theology with
neurobiology. The one thing we know for certain about
spiritual beliefs and feelings is that they are products of the brain - the
firing of electrochemical currents through networks of nerve cells.
Understanding how such thoughts
and emotions are formed and propagated is something
science can tackle. Whether the beliefs are true or false is not. Spirituality
ultimately is a matter of faith, not of genetics.
Proving a link between our
genes and spirituality is not a simple task. I have been exploring this subject
for years, independent of my work as a geneticist at the National Institutes of
Health, and I have concluded that proof, in a case like this, depends on the
whole array of evidence.
The first challenge in my
research was to work out a way to measure spiritual feelings and not just
traditional religious activity. This is an important distinction, because
people who are involved in their church, mosque or
temple are not necessarily spiritual, and deeply spiritual people are sometimes
skeptical of organized religion.
For this, I used a scale called
"self-transcendence," developed by the innovative psychologist Robert
Cloninger, which provides a numerical measure of
people's capacity to reach out beyond themselves - to
see everything in the world as part of one great totality.
Based on Cloninger's
criteria, Mohandas Gandhi and Albert Einstein would score highly; Genghis Khan
would not. This might seem flaky, but it passes the test for a solid
psychological trait.
The second step was to
determine if spirituality is inherited, and if so to
what extent. This was tackled by comparing identical twins, who
have the exact same genes, to fraternal twins, who are only as genetically
similar as ordinary siblings.
Data collected by scientists in
the
By contrast, the shared
cultural environment, such as Sunday school, sermons and parenting, had little
effect on spirituality - even though they were major factors in more traditional
religious views such as belief in the Bible.
The third step was to search
for specific genes involved in spirituality. By comparing self-transcendence
scores with DNA patterns, one such "God gene" stood out. It's called VMAT2, and it is linked to a protein that controls
the amount of crucial brain-signaling chemicals. Interestingly, these same brain chemicals can be triggered by certain drugs that
can bring about mystical-like experiences.
VMAT2 is by no means the entire
story behind spirituality. It has only a small, if key, role; many other genes
and environmental factors also are involved. Nevertheless, the gene is
important because it points out the mechanism by which spirituality plays out
in the brain.
Exploring this mechanism was
the fourth step of my research. The chemicals controlled by the God gene -
known as monoamines - have many functions in the brain. They appear to
influence spirituality by altering consciousness, which can be broadly defined as
our sense of reality - our awareness of ourselves and the universe around us,
including our thoughts, memories and perceptions.
The hallmark of mystical
experiences, such as Saul experienced on the road to
The final step was to account
for the evolution of God genes. If Charles Darwin was right and natural
selection favors some traits over others, what reasons can we find for the
persistence of human spirituality?
This is a matter for educated
guesses, rather than exact science. But one of the
important roles that God genes may play in natural selection is to provide
human beings with an innate sense of optimism. At the psychological level,
optimism is the will to keep on living and procreating, despite the fact that
death is ultimately inevitable.
At the physical level, studies
show that optimism seems to promote better health and quicker recovery from
disease, advantages that would help us to live long enough to have and raise
children and pass on our genetic heritage.
There is a tendency to pit
science and spirituality (or religion) against each other as if they were
intrinsic enemies. They are not. As Einstein famously commented, "Religion
without science is blind; science without religion is lame."
Dean Hamer,
a Harvard-trained geneticist, is author of "The God Gene: How Faith Is
Hardwired Into Our Genes" (Doubleday, $24.95).
Keywords: RELIGION
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