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The scientist with an affection for snails and no tolerance for pedlars of creationism

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Published Date: 07 October 2008
PROFESSOR Steve Jones is one of Britain's best-known scientists and a leading authority in the field of genetics.
Born in Aberystwyth, Wales, and raised in Liverpool, he studied zoology at Edinburgh University before continuing his studies at the University of Chicago.

Much of his formative work was concerned with snails, and how their anatomy can shed new l
ight on biodiversity and genetics. He boasts of having collected hundreds of thousands of specimens from around Europe and keeps many in his London office.

A critic of creationism , which he describes as "the triumph of ignorance", his scientific theories have made him enemies in some circles, and he has received abuse and even death threats as a result of his research.

Prof Jones suggested in a radio interview two years ago that creationists should not be allowed to become medical doctors, as "all of (creationism's] claims fly in the face of the whole of science". He also insisted that no serious biologist could believe in biblical creation. Although he has spent most of his career at UCL, he has also had visiting posts at Harvard University, the University of Chicago, the University of California at Davis, the University of Botswana, Fourah Bay College in Sierra Leone and Flinders University in Adelaide. He was awarded the Royal Society Faraday Medal for public understanding of science in 1997, the BP Natural World Book Prize in 2000 and the Institute of Biology Charter Medal in 2002. He is also president of the Galton Institute.

The 64-year-old combines his academic work with a high-profile broadcasting career, appearing on programmes such as Newsnight and Question Time.





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  • Last Updated: 06 October 2008 9:43 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Boy Wonder,

07/10/2008 08:49:50
He's still wrong in the other article on him regarding future evolution.
2

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 07/10/2008 13:10:59
1 Boy Wonder

So! One out of two ain't too bad.
3

,

07/10/2008 13:12:36
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

danbob,

07/10/2008 18:10:52
Claiming that people who belive in creationism should not be allowed to be doctors is the most bizzare statement I have heard. Many prominant brain surgeons openly claim that the find the human brain so complex that they struggle to belive that it has just evolved. We marvel at a micro chip the size of a thumb nail which can hold vast quantities of information, but fail to appreciate that the human brain can hold millions of times more. The problem with professor Jones is that he is the scientific version of a religious zelot. Never open to reason or discussion.
5

Itchy,

07/10/2008 18:31:45
#4 Creationism is anti-science and no one who is anti-science should be allowed to be a doctor.

Creationism, not Professor Jones, is anti-reason.
6

danbob,

07/10/2008 19:29:37
5# What makes you think that creationism is anti-science. Do the nuro surgeons who belive in creationism not use drugs made because of the knowledge gained by science. Do they not use X-rays and scanning machines.
7

MarkInAlpine,

Alpine, Texas 07/10/2008 21:50:06
What if Evolution is the mechanism planned by God by which humans were created?
8

Richardinho,

08/10/2008 00:58:59
'Many prominant brain surgeons openly claim that the find the human brain so complex that they struggle to belive that it has just evolved'

names, please.

 

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