At 07:24 PM Monday 3/21/2005, William T Goodall wrote:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/03/22/ wrelig22.xml

http://tinyurl.com/5jj5n


"Religious belief is in the genes and can literally be inherited from one's parents, according to new research.

While environmental factors were the largest influences on children,
genetic make-up played a significant part in whether people continued
to believe into adulthood, it found.

The research will refuel the controversy about the existence of a
so-called God gene, which has been hotly disputed by clerics and
theologians.

Based on an analysis of more than 500 identical and non-identical
twins, the study at Minnesota University in America set out to discover
whether spirituality was the result of nature or nurture.

It concluded that children's religiousness was primarily the result of
whether they had been born into a religious household. "But during the
transition from adolescence to adulthood, genetic factors increase in
importance while shared environmental factors decrease," it said.

The twins answered questions about their religious beliefs, from the
regularity of church attendance to how much they relied on prayer.
While the identical twins reported similar patterns over time, the
non-identical twins diverged as they got older, said the study in the
Journal of Personality."

...

"The debate about the "God gene" was prompted last year by Dr Dean
Hamer, the director of the Gene Structure and Regulation Unit at the
National Institute in America. After comparing more than 2,000 DNA
samples, he concluded that the greater people's ability to believe in a
higher spiritual force, the more likely that they would share the gene,
VMAT2."



I don't see the word "defect" used in the article. For all the article says, it could be a useful mutation . . .



GSV Somebody Had To Say It First (Flame On Class)


--Ronn! :)


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