Opinion

DNA Pioneer’s Astonishing Rant

November 02, 2007 | By Sudip Ghosh, MD | Share, Save, and Bookmark | 1 Comment

Opinion.jpgIf James Watson’s chemistry won him a Nobel Prize for unraveling the double helix, his recent interview published from Britain in the Sunday Times promoting his new book “Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science” demonstrates how the pseudoscience trap can generate appalling conclusions. Worse, personally I think that James Watson’s views stand the risk of being quoted as ’scientific’ by organizations like the Ku Klux Clan.

His published statement that black people are ‘genetically’ less intelligent than whites defies scientific belief. I am not aware of any conclusive studies performed by himself or anyone that demonstrates that differences in intelligence in groups separated by geography or time can be ascribed to genetic factors. Dr Watson’s statement is as ludicrous as suggesting that the descent of Europe into the Dark Age after the political collapse of the Graeco-Roman empire can be ascribed to a mutation leading to a dimunition of intelligence on a continental scale.

He further stated that he was pessimistic about efforts to raise the standard of living in Africa. “All our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours - whereas all the testing says not really,” Watson explained in the newspaper interview. He recognized that the prevailing belief was that all human groups are equal, but that “people who have to deal with black employees find this not true.” He quotes the example of his recent inauguration of a DNA learning center near Harlem and stated that he would have liked to have more ethnic minority researchers at his lab — in fact he had “just accepted a black girl” — but “there’s no one to recruit.”

The British Science Museum last week had canceled his scheduled talk and made the following statement: “We know that eminent scientists sometimes say things that cause controversy and the Science Museum does not shy away from debating controversial topics. However, we feel Dr. Watson has gone beyond the point of acceptable debate and we are as a result cancelling his talk.”

I just wonder if the Nobel Committee can re-consider their early decision too. But its time we had a closer look at pseudo-scientific racial rants, which we thought had died out at the end of the second World War.

Related Articles


1 Comment

You can follow any responses to this article through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Ian Kemmish
November 03, 2007 | Permalink

When I was young, “everybody knew” that men were more intelligent than women, and school and university exam results proved it. (Indeed when my college at Cambridge opened up to female undergraduates, they reportedly couldn’t find enough who had passed the entrance exam.) Now, “everybody knows” that the opposite it true, and school and university results prove that too.

Prof Watson’s error - of reducing measures of intelligence to a single figure or merit - is one which everyone makes and - crucially - nearly everyone is comfortable with. So long as they think they’re not talking about race.

Leave a Reply

Subscribe Without Commenting

Monday, January 5, 2009

Brain Blogger's Historical Brain Illustrations

Charles Bell: Course of the Nerves - Neck and Thorax, c. 19th centuryBartolomeo Eustachi: Peripheral Nervous System, c. 1722Bartolomeo Eustachi: Brain and Spine Anatomy, c. 1722Ambroise Pare, Siamese twins illustrated, c. unknownHow to prepare the skull for surgery, brain unexposed, c. 16th centuryHow to prepare the skull for surgery, brain exposed, c. 16th centuryThomas Bartholin: Transected Head Anatomy, c. 1673Antonio Scarpa: Anatomy of Olfaction (Smell), c. 1779Charles Bell: Anatomy of the Brain, c. 1802

Sponsored Links

Neuroscience & Neurology

December 23, 2008 | 3 Comments | By Erin Falconer, MS

Look Me in the Eyes - From Eye Contact to “Fear Blindness”

More In Neuroscience & Neurology


Neuroscience & Neurology

Opinion

December 31, 2008 | 1 Comment | By Sajid Surve, DO

Why a Smartphone is a Dumb Idea

More In Opinion


Opinion

Psychiatry & Psychology

January 02, 2009 | 3 Comments | By Chadwick Royal, PhD, NCC, LPC, ACS

Work and Mental Health

More In Psychiatry & Psychology